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WHAT EXACTLY IS AN ARRHYTHMIA?

Dr. Sanjay Gupta

The word arrhythmia comes from two Greek words. So arrhythmia literally means absence or loss of rhythm. A cardiac arrhythmia therefore means loss of cardiac rhythm. The first is ‘a-’ which means absence or loss and the second is ‘rhythmos’ which means rhythm. Most dysrhythmias once identified are easily treatable.

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Keeping Your Heart Healthy Through the Holidays and Into the New Year

AMS Cardiology

Regular check-ups allow your cardiologist to detect these issues through tests like blood work, EKGs, and echocardiograms. Family History: Regular check-ups are even more critical if you have a family history of heart disease. Your cardiologist can assess your risk factors and implement preventive measures.

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Torsade in a patient with left bundle branch block: is there a long QT? (And: Left Bundle Pacing).

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

EKG with paced complexes shown below shows much narrower QRS complex and echocardiogram showed improved LV systolic function primarily due to improvement in LV dyssynchrony. In this specific case, Left Bundle Branch (LBB) area pacing was pursued to achieve cardiac resynchronization.

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Case Report: Multimodality evaluation and clinical management of a single coronary artery

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine

Electrocardiogram in clinic showed sinus arrhythmia with early repolarization and no ischemic changes. The echocardiogram showed normal cardiac structure and function, however, there was a concern for possible anomalous origin of the left coronary artery.

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Combined left atrial appendage occlusion and catheter ablation procedure for left atrial arrhythmias: A real‐world, propensity‐matched analysis

Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology

vs. 4.5%, p =0.96) on transesophageal echocardiogram did not differ. Both major (1.4% vs. 2.1%, p =0.72) and minor (27.8% vs. 19.4%, p =0.17) in-hospital complications were similar between the combined and control group, respectively. At 45 days, presence of peri-device leak (18.3% vs. 30.4%, p =0.07) and device related thrombosis (4.5%

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6 Cardiology Board Review Questions That Will Help You Pass the Boards

BoardVitals - Cardiovascular

Question banks are a favorite exam preparation resource for Cardiologists that want to practice in the format of the exam.

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A teenager involved in a motor vehicle collision with abnormal ECG

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Hopefully a repeat echocardiogram will be performed outpatient. Other Arrhythmias ( PACs, PVCs, AFib, Bradycardia and AV conduction disorders — potentially lethal VT/VFib ). NOTE: Prediction of cardiac contusion "severity" on the basis of cardiac arrhythmias and ECG findings — is an imperfect science. No cardiac MRI was done.