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Arrhythmias are deviations from the normal
cadence of the heartbeat, which cause the heart to pump improperly.
The normal heartbeat starts in the right atrium, where the heart's
natural pacemaker (the sinus node) sends an electrical signal to the
center of the heart to the atrioventricular node. The
atrioventricular node then sends signals into the main pumping
chamber to make the ventricle contract. Arrhythmias occur when the
heartbeat starts in a part of the heart other than the sinus node,
an abnormal rate or rhythm develops in the sinus node, or a heart
conduction "block" prevents the electrical signal from traveling
down the normal pathway.
More than four million Americans have arrhythmias,
most of which are harmless. Middle-aged adults commonly experience
arrhythmias. As people age, the probability of experiencing an
arrhythmia increases. Arrhythmias often occur in people who do not
have heart disease. In people with heart disease, it is usually the
heart disease which is dangerous, not the arrhythmia. Arrhythmias
often occur during and after heart attacks. Some types of
arrhythmias, such as ventricular tachycardia, are serious and even
life threatening. In the United States, arrhythmias are the primary
cause of sudden cardiac death, accounting for more than 350,000
deaths each year.
Slow heart rates (less than 60 beats per minute)
are called bradycardias, while fast heart rates (more than 100 beats
per minute) are called tachycardias. Bradycardia can result in poor
circulation of blood, and, hence, a lack of oxygen throughout the
body, especially the brain. Tachycardias also can compromise the
heart's ability to pump effectively because the ventricles do not
have enough time to completely fill.
Arrhythmias are characterized by their site of
origin: the atria or the ventricles. Supraventricular arrhythmias
occur in the upper areas of the heart and are less serious than
ventricular arrhythmias. Ventricular fibrillation is the most
serious arrhythmia and is fatal unless medical help is immediate. |