Cardiac Event Monitor My 10 Year Old Girl Has An Extremly High Heart Rate.?

My 10 year old girl has an extremly high heart rate.? - cardiac event monitor

My 10-year-old daughter has a heart attack and there is currently between 120 and 180 I was a pediatric cardiologist Holtz, supervision and monitoring of cardiac events, which carried out to determine the problem was. Holtz surveillance showed no abnormal high heart rate. I know this is not normal, and I'm afraid you do experience chest pain, dizziness, palpitations and dizziness. I'm not sure what else I have to look here for the SVT and so far all I can say is it tachacardia. Im sure that the longer time your heart rate high because this will hurt or damage to your heart. Some suggested questions for dr.

4 comments:

L_H Qutub(Retired) said...

This section, I sought primarily by Maercker manual is intended to help your doctor any questions, please read carefully and write it down:



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Arrhythmia

Headset

Electrocardiography

Atrial fibrillation

Tachycardia

ventricular

Fibrillation

ventricular tachycardia


Ventricular tachycardia is a heart rhythm that results in the chambers and produces a heart rate of at least 120 beats per minute.
Photos

ECG: ventricular tachycardia
ECG: ventricular tachycardia

Ventricular tachycardia may be considered as a sequence of consecutive ventricular premature into consideration. Sometimes a few keystrokes as they occur together, then there's heart to normal rhythm. Ventricular tachycardia more than 30 years areAND is called ventricular tachycardia. Ventricular tachycardia usually occurs in people with heart disease that damages the chambers. Occurs most often for weeks or months after a heart attack. It is more common in older people. However, rarely, it comes to ventricular tachycardia in young people who have no structural heart disease.

Symptoms and Diagnosis

People who often ventricular tachycardia palpitations. Ventricular tachycardia can be dangerous because the ventricles do not adequately fill or pump blood normally. Blood pressure tends to fall, and following heart failure. Ventricular tachycardia is also dangerous, because in ventricular fibrillation, a form of cardiac arrest may worsen. Sometimes some of the symptoms caused ventricular tachycardia, even at speeds up to 200 beats per minute, but still extremely dangerous.

Electrocardiogram (ECG) (see symptoms and diagnosis of heart and blood vessels: Electrocardiography) is used to diagnosentricular tachycardia and to determine whether treatment is necessary. A portable ECG (long term) monitor can be used to record the heart rate during a period of 24 hours.

Treatment

Ventricular tachycardia, when is it causes symptoms or when episodes last about 30 seconds, without causing symptoms. Sustained ventricular tachycardia often requires emergency treatment. Effects of blood pressure by a low level, if falling, cardioversion is needed immediately. Drugs may be administered intravenously to the more or ventricular tachycardia. Trade Names The most commonly used drugs are lidocaineSome
Xylocaine
, ProcainamideSome Brands
SDE SR
Pronestyl
AmiodaroneSome and trade names
Cordarone
.

Some procedures to be done from May to destroy the abnormal area in the small chambers of ECG, which is usually responsible for the sustained ventricular tachycardia identified. These include radiofrequency ablation (delivery of a specific frequency energy through a catheter inserted electrodes) Open the Heart andCardiac surgery.

If the other therapy is ineffective, a defibrillator (a small device that detect an arrhythmia and deliver a shock to correct it) to be implemented. This procedure is similar to the implantation of a pacemaker.

mlgable said...

The tachycardia can be treated or cardiolgist return to the PEDS or find a new and get a clear answer on what happened.

jmiller said...

I do not know where he lives, but when my son, I have probably a different opinion.
If you are in California, go to the University of California at Davis and Stanford University. If you live in California, is the contact by phone or e-mail and ask where they go to in your country.
Do not give in this regard. There is a reason, and I agree, it can more than likely to be injured heart.
Good luck to you both.

jmiller said...

I do not know where he lives, but when my son, I have probably a different opinion.
If you are in California, go to the University of California at Davis and Stanford University. If you live in California, is the contact by phone or e-mail and ask where they go to in your country.
Do not give in this regard. There is a reason, and I agree, it can more than likely to be injured heart.
Good luck to you both.

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