Jump to content

Ventricular fibrillation: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Created page with "'''Ventricular fibrillation''' (VF or V-fib) is, like pulseless VT, a ventricular arrhythmia and an emergency which must be handled with cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation, as the patient has no cardiac output. Like VT, it most commonly occurs in diseased hearts. Sustained VT can quickly develop into ventricular fibrillation, as well. It invariably causes loss of consciousness and death if untreate...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Ventricular fibrillation''' (VF or V-fib) is, like pulseless [[Ventricular tachycardia|VT]], a [[Ventricular arrhythmias|ventricular arrhythmia]] and an emergency which must be handled with [[cardiopulmonary resuscitation]] and defibrillation, as the patient has no cardiac output. Like VT, it most commonly occurs in diseased hearts. Sustained VT can quickly develop into ventricular fibrillation, as well. It invariably causes loss of consciousness and death if untreated.
'''Ventricular fibrillation''' (VF or V-fib) is, like pulseless [[Ventricular tachycardia|VT]], a [[Ventricular arrhythmias|ventricular arrhythmia]] and an emergency which must be handled with [[cardiopulmonary resuscitation]] and defibrillation, as the patient has no cardiac output. Like VT, it most commonly occurs in diseased hearts. Sustained VT can quickly develop into ventricular fibrillation, as well. It invariably causes loss of consciousness and death if untreated.
[[Category:Cardiology]]
[[Category:Cardiology]]
[[Category:Internal Medicine (POTE course)]]