Heart Arrhythmia

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Heart rhythm problems (arrhythmias) occur when there is a malfunction in the electrical impulses within the heart that coordinate how it beats. As a result, the heart beats too fast, too slowly, or irregularly.

Most people have experienced occasional, brief, usually harmless arrhythmias, such as a skipped, fluttering, or racing heartbeat. Although these heart palpitations may feel scary, most people who experience them have nothing wrong with their heart and need no treatment. But more than 4 million Americans, most over age 60, experience heart arrhythmias that may cause bothersome—sometimes even dangerous—signs or symptoms. These may include shortness of breath, fainting—and at the extreme, even an unexpected loss of heart function, breathing, and consciousness that leads to death within minutes unless the person receives emergency medical treatment to restart the heart. So it's important to figure out when an arrhythmia is serious and merits medical attention.

The good news is that physicians have many new tools for treating troublesome arrhythmias. And patients can make lifestyle changes to protect themselves.

This section also discusses:

Need-to-know anatomy

Your heart, which is a muscle, is divided into four chambers—two atria at the top and two ventricles at the bottom. Normally, each heartbeat starts in the right atrium, where a specialized group of cells called the sinus node—the body's natural pacemaker—sends an electrical signal. The signal spreads throughout the right and left atria to the area between the two atria called the atrioventricular (AV) node. The AV node connects to specific pathways that conduct the signal to the ventricles below. As the signal travels, the heart muscle contracts. First the atria contract, which pumps blood into the ventricles. A fraction of a second later, the ventricles contract, pumping blood throughout the body. The combined action of the atria and ventricles results in a heartbeat. In an arrhythmia, this natural rhythm is disrupted.

Risk factors

While most people have heart palpitations at one time or another, certain factors make it more likely you'll experience them:

Causes

Arrhythmias are classified by the part of the heart in which they begin and whether they produce an irregularly fast or slow heartbeat.

Tachycardias

Tachycardias are arrhythmias in which the heartbeat speeds up. They're further classified by where in the heart they begin. This section discusses:

Atrial tachycardias

Several different kinds of arrhythmia originate in the atrium.

In a healthy heart, the electrical impulses in the atria are coordinated, but in atrial fibrillation, they occur randomly and very, very quickly; in fact, the atria can beat up to 400 beats per minute, many times higher than the normal rate of about 70 beats per minute. This hyperfast beating can last for a few minutes, an hour, or persist for days.

The electrical activity that's gone haywire in the atria usually stays there and doesn't entirely spread to the ventricles—the larger, more muscular chambers that pump blood to the lungs (right ventricle) and the rest of the body (left ventricle). The atrioventricular node (AV node) is a group of cells that conduct electrical activity from the atria to the ventricles. In atrial fibrillation, the AV node prevents most electrical impulses from progressing through the ventricles, though enough may get through that the ventricles will contract at a faster-than-normal rate.

Ventricular tachycardias

Some forms of tachycardia originate in the ventricles—the lower, more muscular chambers of the heart that pump blood to the lungs (right ventricle) and the rest of the body (left ventricle):

Bradycardias

When the heart beats too slowly (less than 60 beats per minute), the condition is known as a bradycardia. This isn't always a medical problem; people who are aerobically fit tend to have lower heart rates, sometimes below 60 beats per minute. Yet their hearts efficiently pump enough blood throughout the body. When the heart is not pumping sufficient blood because of a slow heartbeat, it may fall into one of the categories of bradycardia.

Premature heartbeats

Unlike tachycardias and bradycardias, premature heartbeats signify no change in the speed of the heartbeat. They are extra heartbeats that occur in between regular heartbeats; they can begin in either the atria or the ventricles. They aren't usually serious, though they may cause another, more dangerous, form of arrhythmia in people with heart disease. Caffeine, cold medicines, and asthma medications can all prompt premature heartbeats.

Last reviewed on 2/10/2009

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