Continuous electrocardiographic (ECG) monitoring was first introduced into hospitals in the 1960s, initially into critical care, as bedside monitors, and eventually into step-down units with telemetry capabilities. Although the initial use was rather simplistic (ie, heart rate and rhythm assessment), the capabilities of these devices and associated physiologic (vital sign) monitors have expanded considerably. Current bedside monitors now include sophisticated ECG software designed to identify myocardial ischemia (ie, ST-segment monitoring), QT-interval prolongation, and a myriad of other cardiac arrhythmia types. Physiologic monitoring has had similar advances from noninvasive assessment of core vital signs (blood pressure, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation) to invasive monitoring including arterial blood pressure, temperature, central venous pressure, intracranial pressure, carbon dioxide, and many others. The benefit of these monitoring devices is that continuous and real-time information is dis-played and can be configured to alarm to alert nurses to a change in a patient’s condition. I think it...
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1 May 2024
Distinguished Research Lecture Abstract|
May 01 2024
Hospital-Based Electrocardiographic Monitoring: The Good, the Not So Good, and Untapped Potential
Michele M. Pelter, PhD, RN
Michele M. Pelter, PhD, RN
Michele M. Pelter is an associate professor, director of the ECG Monitoring Research Lab, and an associate translational scientist, Center for Physiologic Research, Department of Physiological Nursing, University of California, San Francisco.
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Am J Crit Care (2024) 33 (3): 170.
Citation
Michele M. Pelter; Hospital-Based Electrocardiographic Monitoring: The Good, the Not So Good, and Untapped Potential. Am J Crit Care 1 May 2024; 33 (3): 170. doi: https://doi.org/10.4037/ajcc2024484
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