Transcutaneous Pacing
Emergency external cardiac pacing for symptomatic bradycardia and heart blocks - indications, capture confirmation, and troubleshooting.
Emergency external cardiac pacing for symptomatic bradycardia and heart blocks - indications, capture confirmation, and troubleshooting.
Attach ECG monitoring leads (separate from pacing pads for accurate rhythm assessment). Place pacing pads in anterior-posterior position. Ensure good skin contact - press firmly to remove air bubbles.
Connect pads to defibrillator/pacer. Select PACE mode (not defibrillator mode). Set initial rate to 60-80 bpm. Set output (mA) to 0 initially.
TCP is painful. Provide analgesia and sedation per your local protocols. Ketamine is often preferred for hypotensive patients as it maintains blood pressure. Titrate to comfort while maintaining airway.
Turn pacer ON. Starting at 0mA, gradually increase output by 10mA increments. Watch monitor for pacer spikes followed by wide QRS complexes. Continue increasing until electrical capture achieved.
Electrical capture: Pacer spike followed by wide QRS complex
Mechanical capture (CRITICAL): Palpate RIGHT radial or femoral pulse - must match paced rate. Left-sided pulses may show artifact from muscle contraction.
Once capture confirmed, increase output by 10% above threshold (e.g., if capture at 70mA, set to 80mA). This ensures consistent capture with patient movement or changes.
| Finding | Capture | No Capture |
|---|---|---|
| ECG | Spike → Wide QRS | Spike only, no QRS follows |
| Pulse | Present, matches rate | Absent or doesn't match |
| Blood Pressure | Improving or stable | Remains low |
| Mental Status | Improving | Unchanged or deteriorating |
| Muscle Twitching | Present (chest/pectorals) | May still be present without capture |