Synchronized Cardioversion
Comprehensive synchronized cardioversion guide for paramedics and nurses - indications, technique, troubleshooting, and safety protocols.
Comprehensive synchronized cardioversion guide for paramedics and nurses - indications, technique, troubleshooting, and safety protocols.
| Rhythm | Initial Energy | Subsequent Shocks | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Narrow Complex (SVT) | 50-100 J | 100, 200, 300, 360 J | Start low; usually responds quickly |
| Atrial Flutter | 50-100 J | 100, 200, 300, 360 J | Often cardioverts at lower energies |
| Atrial Fibrillation | 120-200 J | 200, 300, 360 J | Requires higher energy than SVT |
| Wide Complex (VT) | 100 J | 150, 200, 300, 360 J | Treat as VT if uncertain |
Confirm unstable tachycardia with pulses. Identify rhythm (narrow vs wide complex). Assess for signs of instability: hypotension, altered mental status, chest pain, pulmonary edema.
Turn on defibrillator, attach monitoring leads or pads. Press SYNC button (confirm sync markers appearing on QRS complexes). Select appropriate starting energy based on rhythm.
Administer procedural sedation (etomidate 0.1-0.2mg/kg or midazolam 1-2mg IV). Wait for adequate sedation before shocking. Maintain airway patency and monitor respiratory status.
Announce "charging." Press charge button. Announce "stand clear" and perform visual sweep. Ensure no one touching patient. Press SHOCK button. Hold until shock delivers (may have 0.5-2 second delay while syncing).
Check monitor immediately. If successful, patient should convert to sinus rhythm. If unsuccessful, re-engage SYNC mode (critical!), increase energy per protocol, and repeat. Monitor for post-cardioversion hypotension.