I have been a critical care nurse and RN for the better part of a decade and I struggled so much with understanding the origins and the identifications of junctional rhythms and their types. Thank you for making this so easy and concise!!!
I must say, you have a calm, clear voice, and you’re easy to understand. Thank you for this refresher. I have a yearly ECG test in the am, and it’s great to find a straight to the point video with no frills or time-consuming content. You’re awesome 👏🏼
Thank you so much for making this easy to understand . I am taking the EKG course at a community College. That is, from September 6th to November, the 17th 2023. I was told that this is not an accelerated course . We also did not really know what we were in for as students. There is was a lot of information to learn and memorize in a such short period of time. As the teacher Was pretty much lecturing from the book my brain was saying, what? Why are the e k g classes so short? Thank you for making this easy to understand.
Hello ma’am! As u told if san fails atria takes over If atria fails av node takes over Now if av nodes also fails (lets say i removed it) Now bundle of his upper part will take over so will it produce Narrow Qrs Complex or Wide Qrs complex ?? Thnx !
Hello, regarding therapy, how long does it last usually the treatment course with atropine sulfate? does it change the junctional rhythm into sinus or just it increases heart rate? which medication can be used by GP in outpatient ?
Your videos and cards are so so helpful! I was sad to learn about ATI attacking you. I hate that you had to take some of the cards down and some of the videos. I know you are revamping some videos, and I was wondering if you are planning to revamp the cards you had to take down? Thanks so much for everything!
Hi Amelia! We are actively working to publish more cards, videos and create more study resources to help all nursing students master the material they need to succeed. Be sure to subscribe to our email updates on LevelUpRN.com and follow us on social media (IG, FB, Twitter) to be the first to know when new resources are available! Best of luck on your studies!!
Thank you so much for this video! We now have to read our own strips on our medsurg remote tele unit. My coworker and I had what I now think was an accelerated junctional rhythm. I said sinus because it was regular and she said afib because the p waves were odd or missing. The CRN on the cardiac unit said it was junctional which lead me here. They didn't go over junctional rhythms in our EKG class. Your explanation is on point, so concise!