PALS • Pediatric Emergency

Pediatric Bradycardia With a Pulse — What to Do

A quick, modern walkthrough of the PALS algorithm for a bradycardic child with a pulse—recognition of cardiopulmonary compromise, ABC support, oxygen & ventilation, 12-lead ECG, when to start CPR, meds like epinephrine/atropine, pacing, and reversible causes.

Educational only—follow local protocols and a licensed clinician’s direction.

In this guide:

Step 1 — Recognize Cardiopulmonary Compromise

In a bradycardic child, ask: is there compromised perfusion? Look for:

If compromise is present, move immediately to airway/ventilation support and monitoring.

Step 2 — Assessment & Support

Monitoring & Rhythm

Step 3 — When to Start CPR

Begin CPR if the heart rate is < 60/min despite adequate oxygenation and ventilation and there are signs of poor perfusion.

Step 4 — If Bradycardia Persists

Medication Doses (Typical PALS)

Medication Dose / Route Referral
Epinephrine IV/IO: 0.01 mg/kg (0.1 mL/kg of 0.1 mg/mL) PALS Dosing
Atropine 0.02 mg/kg IV/IO; may repeat once (min dose 0.1 mg) PALS Dosing
Transcutaneous pacing For refractory symptomatic bradycardia (esp. high-grade AV block) Pacing Overview

Always confirm doses with your local PALS card or institutional protocol.

Possible Causes to Treat

  • Increased vagal tone
  • Primary conduction disease (AV block)
  • Electrolyte abnormalities

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