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Arrhythmia

Webpages concerning "Arrhythmia"

HealthSouth - - 21st century healthcare with centers of excellence in surgery centers, ambulatory surgery centers, diagnostic centers, inpatient rehab and outpatient rehabilitation.
http://www.healthsouth.com/medinfo/home/app/frame?2=/medlib/medLibDispatcher&pageType=0&medkey=001101&medarttype=article
Keywords:
healthsouth, surgery, ambulatory, diagnostic, inpatient rehab, rehabilitation

http://www.healthsouth.com/medinfo/home/app/frame?2=/medlib/medLibDispatcher&pageType=0&medkey=001101&medarttype=article

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Arrhythmias are disorders of the heart's regular rhythmic beating. Find out what you need to know about this condition.
http://www.americanheart.org/arrhythmia
Keywords:
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http://www.americanheart.org/arrhythmia

This site contains information about arrhythmia
http://www.mamashealth.com/arrhythmia.asp
Keywords:
what is arrhythmia, arrhythmia risks, arrhythmia, heart disease, arrhythmia symptoms, what causes arrhythmia, arrhythmia causes, symptoms of arrhythmia, heart attacks

http://www.mamashealth.com/arrhythmia.asp

Information about arrhythmia from the American Academy of Family Physicians.
http://familydoctor.org/286.xml
Keywords:
rhythm disturbance, bradyarrhythmias, tachyarrhythmias, antiarrhythmic therapy

http://familydoctor.org/286.xml

Health Information on Heart Arrhythmia,carry,Heart,cardiac,sinoatrial node,sinus node,ventricles,ventricle,atria,atrium,Symptoms,symptom,elevations,elevation,neck,nape,neck,cervix,control,drive,control,controlled,contractions,contraction
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/1675.51093
Keywords:
Heart Arrhythmia, carry, Heart, cardiac, sinoatrial node, sinus node, ventricles, ventricle, atria, atrium, Symptoms, symptom, elevations, elevation, neck, nape, neck, cervix, control, drive, control, controlled, contractions, contraction, strong pulse

http://my.webmd.com/content/article/1675.51093

What is atrial fibrillation? Atrial fibrillation, an irregular heart rhythm. Pulmonary vein isolation, maze, Cleveland Clinic Heart Center heart doctor - leaders in treatment of afib, atrial fibrillation, flutter
http://www.clevelandclinic.org/heartcenter/pub/guide/disease/electric/afib.htm
Keywords:
pulmonary vein isolation, ablation, afib, flutter, ablation, atrial fib, fibrillation, flutter, center, for, AF, heart doctors

http://www.clevelandclinic.org/heartcenter/pub/guide/disease/electric/afib.htm

In a normal heart, electrical signals use only one path when they move through the heart and cause it to beat. If theres an extra conduction pathway, the electrical signal may arrive at the ventricles too soon.
http://216.185.112.5/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4785
Keywords:
Wolff-Parkinson-White, Syndrome;, electrical, signal;, heart;, ECG;, heart, rhythm;, tachycardia;, radiofrequency, ablation;, Wolff-Parkinson-White, Syndrome;, electrical, signal;, heart;, ECG;, heart, rhythm;, tachycardia;, radiofrequency, ablation;

http://216.185.112.5/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4785

Cardiovascular Medicine: Procedure: Arrhythmia Defibrillation
http://www.fpnotebook.com/CV257.htm
Keywords:
Arrhythmia, Defibrillation, Procedure, Equipment, Defibrillator

http://www.fpnotebook.com/CV257.htm

Cardiac Arrhythmia
http://www.cardionetics.com/docs/healthcr/ecg/arrh_bd.htm
Keywords:
ambulatory ECG, ECG, monitors, Holter, Cardiac, GP, primary care, Holter analysis, Electro-Cardiogram, Cardiology, Cardiologist, C.Net2000, 2000, cnet, CNet, Arrhythmia, medical, heart monitor

http://www.cardionetics.com/docs/healthcr/ecg/arrh_bd.htm

SVTSupport: Arrhythmia's/SVT
http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/SVTSupport/
Keywords:
SVTSupport, Heart Diseases

http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/SVTSupport/

Working to improve Awareness, Diagnosis and Treatments leading to a better Quality of Life for those with Cardiac Arrhythmias
http://www.aaaw.org.uk/
Keywords:
arrhythmia, syncope, cardiac, Cardiomyopathy, heart beat, heart rhythm, Roger Moore, pacemaker, ICD, cardiac arrest

http://www.aaaw.org.uk/

An arrhythmia is when the heart beats excessively slow or fast, or the rhythm is irregular. Arrhythmias result from damage to the heart's electrical system - BUPA health factsheet.
http://hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/mosby_factsheets/Arrhythmia.html
Keywords:
arrhythmia, palpitations, irregular, heart, attack, beat, rate, rhythm, arrhythmias, causes, electrocardiogram, blood, medicines, common, symptoms, abnormality, disease, electrical, conduction

http://hcd2.bupa.co.uk/fact_sheets/mosby_factsheets/Arrhythmia.html

Arrhythmia diagnosis and treatment by specialists and electrophysiologists at Mayo Clinic.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/arrhythmia-rst/
Keywords:
arrhythmia, arrhythmias, electrophysiologists, heart disease, atrial flutter

http://www.mayoclinic.org/arrhythmia-rst/

The Arrhythmia Service at St Lukes Roosevelt Hospital Center delivers advanced, innovative diagnostic and therapeutic procedures to patients with the full spectrum of cardiac arrhythmias.
http://www.arrhythmia.org/
Keywords:
arrhythmia, arhythmia, ablation, atrial fibrillation, fibrillation, SVT, biventricular, pacemaker, cardiac resynchronization, atrial flutter, AF, WPW, supraventricular tachycardia, heart failure, implantable cardioverter defibrillator, laser lead extraction, bypass tract, electrophysiologic study, ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest, Wolf Parkinson White, EPS, ...

http://www.arrhythmia.org/

Doctor-produced health and medical information written for you to make informed decisions about your health concerns.
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/forum.asp?li=MNI&ArticleKey=437
Keywords:
medical information, symptoms and signs, disease, medical dictionary, drug information, prescription, medications, and, drug, side, effects, food, and, drug, interactions, diseases and conditions, procedures and tests, health information, medical, definitions, and, terms, womens health, mens health, senior health

http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/forum.asp?li=MNI&ArticleKey=437

Doctor-produced health and medical information written for you to make informed decisions about your health concerns.
http://www.medicinenet.com/Script/Main/Art.asp?li=MNI&ag=Y&ArticleKey=437
Keywords:
medical information, symptoms and signs, disease, medical dictionary, drug information, prescription, medications, and, drug, side, effects, food, and, drug, interactions, diseases and conditions, procedures and tests, health information, medical, definitions, and, terms, womens health, mens health, senior health

http://www.medicinenet.com/Script/Main/Art.asp?li=MNI&ag=Y&ArticleKey=437

Please may I have some information on paroxysmal atrial tachycardia?
http://health.iafrica.com/doconline/qa/cardiac/pat.htm

http://health.iafrica.com/doconline/qa/cardiac/pat.htm

What exactly is Parkinson-White Syndrome?
http://health.iafrica.com/doconline/qa/cardiac/wpw.htm

http://health.iafrica.com/doconline/qa/cardiac/wpw.htm

A comprehensive, fully referenced review of the causes, prevention and treatment options for lone atrial fibrillation – a stress–related disorder that is becoming increasingly common.
http://www.yourhealthbase.com/atrial_fibrillation.html
Keywords:
International Health News, The AFIB Report, health news, medicine, health, medical news, lone atrial fibrillation, atrial fibrillation, arrhythmias, palpitations, irregular heart beat, antiarrhythmic drugs, digoxin, digitalis, warfarin, adrenergic, vagal, magnesium, coenzyme Q10, hawthorn, prevention, alternative treatment, conventional treatment, cardioversion, heart disease, stroke

http://www.yourhealthbase.com/atrial_fibrillation.html

http://www.lhsc.on.ca/uwodoc/pages/arrhy.htm

http://www.lhsc.on.ca/uwodoc/pages/arrhy.htm

Cardiac Arrhythmia, Arrhythmias, Tachyarrhythmia, Einthoven, Continuing Medical Education in Cardiac Arrhythmias, Bradycardias, Tachycardias, ECG, abnormal heart rhythms.
http://www.arrhythmia.net/
Keywords:
cardiac arrhythmias, cardiac arrhythmia, Einthoven, ventricular arrhythmias, supraventricular arrhythmias, atrial fibrillation, antiarrhythmic therapy, ventricular defibrillator, atrial defibrillator, amiodarone, propafenone, sotalol, flecainide

http://www.arrhythmia.net/

http://www.cardiology-associates.com/faq/4.html

http://www.cardiology-associates.com/faq/4.html

Heart Rhythm Center, Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/cardiovascular-rst/arrhythmiaclinic.html

http://www.mayoclinic.org/cardiovascular-rst/arrhythmiaclinic.html

http://www.hrt.org/cwgcpindex.html
Keywords:
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http://www.hrt.org/cwgcpindex.html

http://rnbob.tripod.com/lethaldysrhythmias.htm

http://rnbob.tripod.com/lethaldysrhythmias.htm

http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/peds/pidl/cardio/arrythm.htm

http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/peds/pidl/cardio/arrythm.htm

New drugs and devices show promise in curbing the number of deaths from ventricular arrhythmias.
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/1997/397_hart.html
Keywords:
ventricular arrhythmias, ventricular fibrillation, arrhythmias, premature beat, skipped beats, heart palpitations, ventricular tachycardias, beta blockers, sodium channel blockers, potassium channel blockers

http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/1997/397_hart.html

http://www.arrhythmiaclass.com/

http://www.arrhythmiaclass.com/

http://www.kfshrc.edu.sa/cardiovascular/html/arrhythmia.html

http://www.kfshrc.edu.sa/cardiovascular/html/arrhythmia.html

http://www.drdaveanddee.com/heart.html

http://www.drdaveanddee.com/heart.html

http://pc4.fsm.it:81/cardmoc

http://pc4.fsm.it:81/cardmoc

http://www.temple.edu/heart/html/palpitations.html

http://www.temple.edu/heart/html/palpitations.html

http://www.hosppract.com/issues/1999/0901/gold.htm

http://www.hosppract.com/issues/1999/0901/gold.htm

http://www.txai.org/edu/irregular/irregular_rhythms.htm

http://www.txai.org/edu/irregular/irregular_rhythms.htm

http://sleeptight.com/EncyMaster/A/arrhythmia.html

http://sleeptight.com/EncyMaster/A/arrhythmia.html

http://www.guidant.com/condition/arrhythmia/condition.shtml

http://www.guidant.com/condition/arrhythmia/condition.shtml

http://www.medical-library.net/sites/framer.html?/sites/_cardiac_arrhythmia.html

http://www.medical-library.net/sites/framer.html?/sites/_cardiac_arrhythmia.html

http://www.heartpoint.com/arrhythmias\\%20-\\%20introduction.html

http://www.heartpoint.com/arrhythmias\\%20-\\%20introduction.html

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Wikipedia-Article "Arrhythmia"

Cardiac arrhythmia
ICD-10 code: I47-I49
ICD-9 code: 427.9

Cardiac arrhythmia is a group of conditions in which the muscle contraction of the heart is irregular or is faster or slower than normal. Cardiac dysrhythmia is technically more correct, as arrhythmia would imply that there is "no rhythm," but this term is not used frequently.

Some arrhythmias are life-threatening medical emergencies that can cause cardiac arrest and sudden death. Others cause aggravating symptoms, such as an awareness of the heart beat palpitation that can be annoying. Some are quite benign and normal. Sinus arrhythmia is the mild acceleration followed by slowing of the normal rhythm that occurs with breathing. In adults the normal heart rate ranges from 60 beats per minute to 100 beats per minute. The normal heart beat is controlled by a small area in the upper chamber of the heart called the sinus node. The sinus node contains specialized cells that have spontaneous electrical activity that starts each normal heart beat.

Contents

Frequency too high/low

A heart rate faster than 100 beats/minute is considered a tachycardia. With exercise the sinus node increases its rate of electrical activity to accelerate the heart rate. The normal fast rate that develops is called sinus tachycardia. Arrhythmias that are due to fast, abnormal electrical activity can cause tachycardias that are dangerous. If the ventricles of the heart experiences one of these tachycardias for a long period of time, there can be deleterious effects. Individuals may sense a tachycardia as a pounding sensation of the heart, known as palpitations. If a tachycardia lowers blood pressure it may cause lightheadedness or dizzinesses, or even fainting [syncope]. If the tachycardia is so fast that the heart can not function, it leads to death, which may occur suddenly.

Most tachycardias are not dangerous. Anything that increases adrenaline or its effects on the heart will increase the heart rate and potentially cause palpitations or tachycardias. Causes include stress, ingested or injected substances (ie: caffeine, alcohol (see Holiday heart syndrome), and an overactive thyroid gland hyperthyroidism. Individuals who have a tachycardia are often advised to limit or remove exposure to any causative agent.

A slow rhythm, known as bradycardia (less than 60 beats/min), is usually not life threatening, but may cause symptoms. When it causes symptoms implantation of a permanent pacemaker may be needed.

Either dysrhythmia requires medical attention to evaluate the risks associated with the arrhythmia.

Fibrillation

A serious variety of arrhythmia is known as fibrillation. Fibrillation occurs when the heart muscle begins a quivering motion instead of a normal, healthy pumping rhythm. Fibrillation can affect the atrium (atrial fibrillation) or the ventricle (ventricular fibrillation); ventricular fibrillation is imminently life-threatening.

Atrial fibrillation is the quivering, chaotic motion in the upper chambers of the heart, known as the atria. Atrial fibrillation is often due to serious underlying medical conditions, and should be evaluated by a physician. It is not typically a medical emergency.

Ventricular fibrillation occurs in the ventricles (lower chambers) of the heart, it is always a medical emergency. If left untreated, ventricular fibrillation (VF, or V-fib) can lead to death within minutes. When a heart goes into V-fib, effective pumping of the blood stops. V-fib is considered a form of cardiac arrest, and an individual suffering from it will not survive unless cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and defibrillation are provided immediately.

CPR can prolong the survival of the brain in the lack of a normal pulse, but defibrillation is the intervention which is most likely to restore a more healthy heart rhythm. It does this by applying an electric shock to the heart, after which sometimes the heart will revert to a rhythm that can once again pump blood.

Almost every person goes into ventricular fibrillation in the last few minutes of life as the heart muscle reacts to diminished oxygen or general blood flow, trauma, irritants, or depression of electrical impulses themselves from the brain.

Origin of impulse

When an electrical impulse begins in any part of the heart, it will spread throughout the myocardium and cause a contraction; see Electrical conduction system of the heart. Abnormal impulses can begin by one of two mechanisms: automaticity or reentry.

Automaticity

Automaticity refers to a cardiac muscle cell firing off an impulse on its own. Every cardiac cell has this potential: if it does not receive any impulses from elsewhere, its internal "pacemaker" will fire off an impulse after a certain amount of time. A single specialized location in the atria, the sinoatrial node, has a higher automaticity (a faster pacemaker) than the rest of the heart, and therefore is usually the one to start the heartbeat.

Any part of the heart that initiates an impulse without waiting for the sinoatrial node is called an ectopic focus, and is by definition a pathological phenomenon. This may cause a single premature beat now and then, or, if the ectopic focus fires more often than the sinoatrial node, it can produce a sustained abnormal rhythm. Rhythms produced by an ectopic focus in the atria, or by the atrioventricular node, are the least dangerous dysrhythmias; but they can still produce a decrease in the heart's pumping efficiency, because the signal reaches the various parts of the heart muscle with slightly different timing than usual and causes a poorly coordinated contraction.

Conditions that increase automaticity include sympathetic nervous system stimulation and hypoxia. The resulting heart rhythm depends on where the first signal begins: if it is the sinoatrial node, the rhythm remains normal but rapid; if it is an ectopic focus, many types of dysrhythmia can result.

Reentry

Reentrant dysrhythmias occur when an electrical impulse travels in a circle within the heart, rather than moving outward and then stopping. Every cardiac cell is able to transmit impulses in every direction, but will only do so once within a short period of time. Normally the impulse spreads through the heart quickly enough that each cell will only respond once, but if conduction is abnormally slow in some areas, part of the impulse will arrive late and will be treated as a new impulse, which can then spread backward. Depending on the timing, this can produce a sustained abnormal rhythm, such as atrial flutter, a self-limiting burst of supraventricular tachycardia, or the dangerous ventricular tachycardia.

By analogy, imagine a room full of people all given these instructions: "If you see anyone starting to stand up, then stand up for three seconds and sit back down." If the people are quick enough to respond, the first person to stand will trigger a single wave which will then die out; but if there are stragglers on one side of the room, people who have already sat down will see them and start a second wave, and so on.

Diagnosis

Cardiac dysrhythmias are often first detected by simple but nonspecific means: auscultation of the heartbeat with a stethoscope, or feeling for peripheral pulses. These cannot usually diagnose specific dysrhythmias, but can give a general indication of the heart rate and whether it is regular or irregular. Not all the electrical impulses of the heart produce audible or palpable beats; in many cardiac arrhythmias, the premature or abnormal beats do not produce an effective pumping action and are experienced as "skipped" beats.

The simplest specific diagnostic test for assessment of heart rhythm is the electrocardiogram (abbreviated ECG or EKG). A Holter monitor is an ECG recorded over a 24-hour period, to detect dysrhythmias that may happen briefly and unpredictably throughout the day.

SADS

SADS, or sudden arrhythmia death syndrome, is a term used to describe sudden death due to cardiac arrest brought on by an arrhythmia. The most common cause of sudden death in the US is coronary artery disease. Approximately 300,000 people die suddenly of this cause every year in the US. SADS can also occur from other causes. Tragically there are many inherited condictions and heart diseases that can affect young people that can cause sudden death. Many of these victims have no symptoms before dying suddenly.

The most common causes of SADS in young people are long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia.

List of common cardiac dysrhythmias

Antiarrhythmic therapies

There are many classes of antiarrhythmic medications and many individual drugs within these classes. See the article on antiarrhythmic agents.

Dysrhythmias may also be treated electrically. Cardioversion is the application of electrical current across the chest wall to the heart and it is used for treatment of supraventricular or pulsed ventricular tachycardia. Defibrillation differs in that it is used for ventricular fibrillation and pulseless ventricular tachycardia, and more electricity is delivered with defibrillation than with cardioversion. In cardioversion, the recipient is either sedated or lightly anesthetized for the procedure. In defibrillation, the recipient has lost consciousness so there is no need for sedation.

Electrical treatment of dysrhythmia includes cardiac pacing. Temporay pacing may be done for very slow heartbeats, or bradycardia, from drug overdose or myocardial infarction. A pacemaker may be placed in situations where the bradycardia is not expected to recover.

Atrial fibrillation can also be treated through a procedure, e.g. pulmonary vein isolation. This is performed by a cardiologist who specializes in electrophysiology and is done percutaneously with catheters. Alternatively, a maze procedure can be performed through cardiothoracic surgery.

Related topics

External links

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