All About Heart Blockage
DEFINITION
Blockage of the heart is a delay in the conduction of electrical current through the rod when atrioventicular, the files on His, or both branches of the files, all located between the atria and ventricles.
Some types of heart congestion caused no symptoms, but others cause fatigue, dizziness and fainting.
Elektrodiografi used to detect clogged heart. Some people need an artificial pacemaker.
Clogged heart-classified as first degree when electrical conduction to the ventricles is slightly delayed, level-two when conduction is blocked temporarily, or level-three (full) when conduction is blocked completely. Most types of heart blockage is more common in older people.
In the first-degree heart blockage, each electrical impulse from the atria reach the ventricles, but each one slows down for the second fragment as it moves through atrioventricular trunk. First-degree heart blockage is common in well-trained athletes, teenagers, young adults, and people with a high active vagus nerve.
However, the disorder also occurs in people with rheumatic heart disease, sarcoidosis affecting the heart, or other cardiac structural disorders. Which may be caused by drugs, especially the slow conduction of electrical impulses along the stem atrioventricular (such as beta-blockers, diltiazem, verapamil, digoxin, and amiodarone). These disorders rarely cause symptoms and can be detected only by electrocardiuography (ECG), which showed delayed conduction.
In the two-degree heart blockage, only a few electrical impulses reach the ventricle. The heart may beat with a slow, irregular, or both. Some form of blockage in the heart-rate two-to three-degree heart blockage.
In the three-degree heart blockage, there is no movement from the atria reach the ventricles, the heart rate and rhythm control with atrioventricular trunk, bundle of His, or chambers of the heart itself. Artificial pacemaker replacement is slower than normal artificial pacemaker (sinus or sinoatrial rod) and are often irregular and unreliable. Thus, the chambers of the heart beat very slowly-less than 50 beats per minute and sometimes 30 beats per minute. Third-degree heart blockage is a serious arrhythmia that can memepengaruhi heart's pumping ability. Fatigue, dizziness, and fainting are common. When the chambers of the heart beat faster than 40 beats per minute, less severe symptoms.
TREATMENT
First-degree heart blockage does not need treatment even when treatment was caused by heart problems. Some people with heart blockage with a second-level require an artificial pacemaker. Almost all people with third-degree heart blockage requiring an artificial pacemaker.
Temporary pacemaker may be used in emergencies until a permanent can be planted. Most people need a tool for the artificial heart of their lives, although the heart rate can return to normal if the cause of the blockage of the heart can be broken-for example, after recovering from a heart attack.
Comments
Post a Comment