Introduction to Telemetry Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

T waves may be abnormal in the presence of which conditions?

Ischemia or potassium abnormalities (high or low)

T waves reflect ventricular repolarization, and their appearance changes when the heart muscle is stressed or the electrical environment is altered. Ischemia disrupts repolarization, producing T-wave changes such as peaking early and inversion later. Potassium levels strongly affect T waves: high potassium (hyperkalemia) tends to create tall, peaked T waves, while low potassium (hypokalemia) can flatten T waves and bring out U waves and possible inversion. Because T waves can be abnormal in either ischemia or potassium abnormalities, they’re not limited to one cause. The other options are too narrow or incorrect because T waves are not always normal and can be altered by both ischemia and potassium disturbances (high or low).

Only ischemia

Only hyperkalemia

Always normal

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