Skip to main content

What is Heart Palpitations? Palpitations or Heart Attack


What is Heart Palpitations?

when patients are describing either a racing heart, that their heart will just, they feel like they just ran a mile even though they’re just sitting at rest. When people, when patients describe skipped beats, like they feel like their heart is skipping a beat and it bothers them, it interferes with their quality of life. Depending on the type of arrhythmias they can interfere with the quality of the patient’s life, for one, and if it’s something like atrial fibrillation it could lead to things like stroke, heart failure, increased risks for death related to cardiovascular causes.


A lot of patients already know, in terms of lifestyle changes, what’s bringing on the palpitation. Say they have three cups of coffee or energy drinks in the morning and then they get palpitations. I think that’s, you know, caffeine is a stimulant and it stimulates the adrenaline system for the heart and a lot of arrhythmias arise from an excess of that adrenaline and cutting back on things like caffeine and just knowing, sort of being aware of what what things in terms of diet, lifestyle that brings on the palpitations and making a note of that and cutting those things out.
Palpitations and how you know the difference between that and the symptoms of a heart attack.
It generally appears as a fluttering in the chest, just about here. A bit like a sort of butterfly in there. Often last thing at night when you’re sitting quietly in bed you feel this and then there’s suddenly a (gasp) bit of a pause and a thump. And what that is, is there’s a pause in the pulse and then a big pulse after that. And that’s entirely normal. Occasionally it’s associated with diseases such as the thyroid gland. But rarely. And, occasionally, with drinking too much caffeine, so too much coffee. And you may get no symptoms of this.
But, you get an irregular pulse. So what’s important is every now and then to check your pulse. Is it regular? If it’s irregular, then it’s sensible to see your doctor. Because what this is, is the top bit of the heart, the atria, are beating irregularly. A heartbeat starts when an electrical impulse is produced by the sinus node. This causes the atria, the top of the heart, to contract pushing blood into the lower part which is called the ventricles. The electrical impulse then makes the ventricles contract, pushing the blood out and around your body. Now, a heart attack.
heart attack is very different. Usually it comes on as a sudden central chest pain, and stops you in your tracks. It may be a tightness around the chest. Maybe in the jaw you get an aching or in the left hand or sometimes in the stomach. Now, anything like that, you immediately call the emergency services because what a heart attack is, is that those arteries in the heart have become blocked.
But nowadays we have some really amazing treatment that can unblock it if we get to you quick enough. A surgeon can thread a thin, flexible tube called a catheter through an artery in your groin and up to the blocked artery in your heart. A guide wire with a small balloon and wire mesh tube called a stent is then fed up along the catheter and into the place where the narrowing is. As you can see from our animation, the balloon will gently then be inflated, squashing the fatty material that’s blocking the artery allowing blood to get through much more easily.
The stent is then left in place, the balloon; the guide wire and the catheter are removed. Occasionally, the stent will be coated with a medicine to help reduce the chances of your artery narrowing again. So, if you have a thumping in your chest, it’s very unlikely to be anything serious but go and see the Palpitations expert doctor and seek reassurance..

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A-FIB VERSUS JUNCTIONAL RHYTHMS

. ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: On your rhythm strip, the two most important characteristics are: . 1) A rhythm that’s IRREGULARLY irregular (meaning there’s no way to predict the next beat) 2) No discernible P waves . In fact, if you notice an irregularly irregular rhythm and you’re having to convince yourself that you see P waves... it’s probably A-fib (multifocal atrial arrhythmias like WAP/MAT could fit the differential) . *In my opinion: Don’t get caught up in using fibrillation waves as an absolute criteria. Very fine A-fib can sometimes produce a near isoelectric line between beats. . JUNCTIONAL RHYTHMS: The pacemaker cells surrounding the AV junction are capable of initiating regular impulses but at a slightly slower natural rate than their sinus and atrial superiors. The heart is built this way so that when the pacemaker cells with the fastest intrinsic rates are in action, those below are suppressed and function primarily to pass along the impulse from above. . For these reasons, we s...

The Pathway of Blood

Here’s a great illustration on the pathway of blood flow through the heart. It may seem easy...but you should know this cold as well as the cardiac anatomy, both of which will make procedures and understanding hemodynamics easier. . . . 💙VENOUS BLOOD- Blood flows into the heart (into the right atrium) through two major veins (the superior and inferior vena cava) as well as from the coronary sinus (cardiac venous blood from the coronaries) and then out through the first AV valve (tricuspid valve) into the right ventricle. From there blood flows into the right ventricular outflow tract, across the first semilunar valve (pulmonic valve) and into the main and then left and right pulmonary arteries. Blood then enters the lungs to become oxygenated. . . . ❤️ARTERIAL BLOOD- now that blood is oxygenated flow goes from the lungs into the left atrium through 4 veins (usually) called the pulmonary veins. From the left atrium blood flows across the other AV valve (mitral valve) and into the left ...

Cardiac Structures Visualized From Within The Heart

  Take a trip inside the heart ! . . . 🎦Here’s a great video of the cardiac structures visualized from within the heart. . . . The heart is composed of 4 major valves . . ♦️The AV valves: Mitral and Tricuspid . . 🔹The Semilunar Valves: Aortic and Pulmonic . . . 💞The aortic valve is made up of three major cusps: the right, left, and non coronary cusps. The pulmonic valve is made up of the right, left, and anterior cusps. The mitral valve has two leaflets: the anterior and posterior leaflets. The tricuspid valve has three leaflets: the anterior, posterior, and septal leaflets. The mitral and tricuspid Valves have subvalvular apparatuses with papillary muscles and chordae. . . . 📝Keys about the heart valves: . . 🔑 they are collagenous, non conductible tissue, that form the fibrous trigone of the heart . . 🔑 the tricuspid valve always names the morphological right ventricle and (for the most part) is always apically displaced . . 🔑 the mitral valve is the only AV valve that shar...