Cardiovascular Diseases
Atrial Fibrillation
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The electrical heart conduction pathway must be followed to ensure the heart pumps properly.
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The heartbeat starts in the right atrium when a special group of cells (the sinus node or "pacemaker" of the heart) sends an electrical signal.
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The signal spreads throughout the atria and to the
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The A-V node connects to a group of fibers in the ventricles that conduct the electric signal.
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The impulse travels down these specialized fibers to all
parts of the ventricles
Arrhythmias (or dysrhythmias) are abnormal rhythms of the
heart which cause the heart to pump less effectively.
Normally, as the electrical impulse moves through the
heart, the heart contracts - about 60 to 100 times a minute. Each contraction
represents one heartbeat. The atria contract a fraction of a second before the
ventricles so their blood empties into the ventricles before the ventricles
contract.
Under some conditions almost all heart tissue is capable of
starting a heartbeat, or becoming the pacemaker. An arrhythmia occurs when:
- the heart's natural pacemaker develops an abnormal rate or rhythm.
- the normal conduction pathway is interrupted.
- another part of the heart takes over as pacemaker.
The electrical activity of the heart is measured by an
electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG). By placing electrodes at specific locations on
the body (chest, arms, and legs), a graphic representation, or tracing, of the
electrical activity can be obtained. Changes in an ECG from the normal tracing
can indicate arrhythmias, as well as other heart-related conditions.
Almost everyone knows what a basic ECG tracing looks like.
But what does it mean?
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- The first little upward notch of the ECG tracing is called the "P wave." The
P wave indicates that the atria (the two upper chambers of the heart)
are electrically stimulated to pump blood to the ventricles.
- The next part of the tracing is a short downward section connected to a tall
upward section. This next part is called the "QRS complex." This part indicates
that the ventricles (the two lower chambers of the heart) are electrically
stimulated to pump out blood.
- The next short flat segment is called the "ST segment." The ST segment
indicates the amount of time from the end of the contraction of the ventricles
to the beginning of the "T wave".
- The next upward curve is the T wave. The T wave indicates the recovery
period of the ventricles.
When your physician studies your ECG, he/she looks at the
size and length of each part of the ECG. Variations in size and length of the
different parts of the tracing may be significant. The tracing for each lead of
a 12-lead ECG will look different, but will have the same basic components as
described above. Each lead of the 12-lead is "looking" at a specific part of the
heart, so variations in a lead may indicate a problem with the part of the heart
associated with the lead.
Atrial fibrillation is a type of arrhythmia. With atrial
fibrillation, the electrical signals in the atria (the two small chambers of the
heart) are fired in a very fast and uncontrolled manner. The atria quiver
instead of contract. The electrical signals then arrive in the ventricles in an
irregular fashion. When atria do not contract effectively, the blood may pool
and/or clot. If a blood clot becomes lodged in an artery in the brain, a stroke
(brain attack) may occur. About 15 percent of strokes occur in persons with
atrial fibrillation. Aspirin, warfarin, and cardiac medications may be used to
treat atrial fibrillation.
According to the latest recommendations from the American
College of Physicians and the American Academy of Family Physicians, for most
patients with atrial fibrillation, slowing heart rate with atenolol, metoprolol,
diltiazem, or verapamil is the most appropriate treatment. Patients with atrial
fibrillation should receive blood thinners to prevent stroke unless they have a
condition that would make anticoagulation dangerous (such as alcoholism with
frequent falls).
Patients who choose conversion to normal heart rhythm
instead of rate control because of symptoms can select electrical or medical
cardioversion. For patients who choose cardioversion, outcomes are similar
whether patients have immediate cardioversion following a special test (transesophageal
echocardiogram) to make sure no blood clots exist or if they delay cardioversion
until blood thinners take effect. Most patients should not take medications to
maintain normal rhythm after cardioversion, the two national medical groups
suggest.
In 2005, St. John's cardiologists were
the first in the region to offer a new treatment for atrial fibrillation
(irregular heart rhythm). Catheter-based pulmonary vein isolation is proving
successful for many patients with the heart disorder that affects about 2.2
million people.
Electrophysiolgists (subspecialists
within cardiology) Shang-Chuin Lee, M.D. and
Stanley Wiggins, M.D.
perform the catheter-based ablations in an electrophysiology lab within St.
John's Hospital's cardiac catheterization lab. Intracardiac ultrasound,
performed by a catheter transducer inserted from a venous blood vessel into
the heart, is used throughout the procedure to view the structures of the
heart and evaluate pulmonary blood flow.
"The ablation is performed
by delivering energy from a catheter to the area of the atria that connects to
the pulmonary vein, producing a circular electrical barrier. The barrier will
then block any impulses firing from within the pulmonary vein from reaching
the atrium, thus preventing atrial fibrillation from occurring. The process is
repeated to all four pulmonary veins," explains Dr. Lee.
Radiofrequency ablation and
cryoablation are two other catheter-based procedures to treat atrial
fibrillation.
Radiofrequency ablation
involves a physician guiding a catheter with an electrode at its tip to the
area of heart muscle where there's an accessory (extra) pathway.
During cryoablation, a
physician uses a freezing technique to destroy cells that cause abnormal heart
beats. A catheter is inserted into the patient's leg and guided it into the
heart. When the tip of the catheter reaches the treatment site, its
temperature is dropped to minus 25 degrees Celsius. If the catheter is not
positioned correctly, the cells in that location can recover. If the catheter
is on target, its temperature is dropped to minus 70 degrees Celsius to
destroy the tissue.
St. John's cardiovascular
surgeons also correct atrial fibrillation via surgical and nonsurgical atrial
fibrillation ablation and the MAZE procedure, in conjunction with other
cardiac procedures, such as coronary bypass or valve surgery.
"We now know the longer
you have atrial fibrillation, the more frequent it becomes and the harder it
is to treat," says Dr. Wiggins. "There's an immediate relief of symptoms
following pulmonary vein ablation. This has been one of the biggest
breakthroughs ever in the history of electrophysiology."
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