âđïļ Skipped - page is already crawled
| Filter | Status | Condition | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| HTTP status | PASS | download_http_code = 200 | HTTP 200 |
| Age cutoff | PASS | download_stamp > now() - 6 MONTH | 0.1 months ago |
| History drop | PASS | isNull(history_drop_reason) | No drop reason |
| Spam/ban | PASS | fh_dont_index != 1 AND ml_spam_score = 0 | ml_spam_score=0 |
| Canonical | PASS | meta_canonical IS NULL OR = '' OR = src_unparsed | Not set |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| URL | https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia |
| Last Crawled | 2026-04-14 15:18:57 (3 days ago) |
| First Indexed | 2023-07-25 02:00:48 (2 years ago) |
| HTTP Status Code | 200 |
| Meta Title | Heart arrhythmia - Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis and Treatment |
| Meta Description | Heart Arrhythmia is an electrical heartbeat abnormalityâbeating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. Common symptoms include palpitations, dizziness, and fatigue. Left untreated, it may lead to heart failure or stroke. |
| Meta Canonical | null |
| Boilerpipe Text | Choose the topic you want to read.
Heart arrhythmia
Symptoms
When to see a doctor
How our heart works
Causes
Risk factors
Prevention
Treatment
Heart Arrhythmia
is an electrical heartbeat abnormalityâbeating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. Common symptoms include palpitations, dizziness, and fatigue. Left untreated, it may lead to heart failure or stroke.
People can have a fast heartbeat during exercise or a slow heartbeat while sleeping. When your heart beats irregularly due to faulty electrical signals, it may be due to a heart arrhythmia. You may experience a heart that is racing or fluttering. Some heart arrhythmias can be harmless, while others can be life-threatening. Â
To treat heart arrhythmia, your doctor may prescribe medications, perform catheter procedures, or device implantation. However, maintaining a healthy lifestyle can lower the risk of developing heart arrhythmias.
Type of heart arrhythmias
Type
Symptoms/Rate
Risks
Tachycardia
> 100 bpm
Risk of heart failure or fainting
Bradycardia
< 60 bpm
Inadequate blood flow to the brain
Atrial Fibrillation
Irregular & rapid heartbeats
High Risk:
Stroke & blood clots
Tachycardia (fast heartbeat)
is when the resting heartbeat is over 100 beats per minute.
Bradycardia (slow heartbeat)
is when the resting heartbeat is less than 60 beats per minute.
Tachycardia
can be classified as follows:
Atrial fibrillation (A-fib)
results from chaotic cardiac signals, leading to temporary uncoordinated racing heart rhythm. However, left untreated, some people may have a continuous A-fib rhythm. A-fib is associated with other severe complications such as stroke.
Atrial flutter
occurs when the atria (upper heartâs chambers) beat too rapidly but more rhythmically than A-fib. It is also associated
with
Supraventricular tachycardia
develops due to erratic heartbeat in the heartâs upper chambers. It can lead to heart palpitation.
Ventricular tachycardia
is the abnormal heart rhythm due to erratic electrical signals in the ventricles (the heartâs lower chambers). The heart beats so fast that there is inadequate blood to fill the ventricles to pump to the body. Ventricular tachycardia may not pose any symptoms in some people with a healthy heart. However, in those with heart disease, it can lead to a medical emergency.
Ventricular fibrillation (V-fib)
is the most life-threatening arrhythmic condition because the heart muscles quiver but do not contract or pump blood; there is no blood circulation or pulse. Patients will have cardiac arrest if they do not receive CPR or defibrillation. They will die within a few minutes.
Bradycardia
Sick sinus syndrome
is a heartbeat disorder frequent among the elderly. The scarring near the sinus node can interfere with the flow of electrical current, causing the heart to beat too slowly or stop beating for several seconds, leading to fatigue and syncope. Some may have a tachy-brady syndrome
.
Conduction block
happens when the heartâs electrical pathway is blocked. The electric current from the upper chamber cannot travel to the lower heart chambers slowing down or stopping the heartbeat.
Premature heartbeats
Premature heartbeats are extra heartbeats that may come from the upper or lower heart chamber. You will feel like your heart is skipping a beat. Usually, they are not alarming but can trigger long-term arrhythmia, particularly in people with heart disease. It can lead to a weak heart in people with frequent and long-standing premature beats. Premature heartbeats can occur when you rest, exercise strenuously or consume stimulants like nicotine or caffeine.
Symptoms: What Does Heart Arrhythmia Feel Like?
The irregular heartbeat may be asymptomatic and could only be detectable during an exam for other medical conditions. However, some signs and symptoms may include:
Chest pain
Shortness of breath
Tachycardia
Bradycardia
Fluttering heart
Dizziness
Sweating
Syncope
Fatigue
Anxiety
When to See a Doctor for Heart Palpitations
Seek medical attention if you experience shortness of breath, dizziness, fainting, chest pain, and your heartbeat is too fast, too slow, or skipping. Ventricular fibrillation can cause your blood pressure to drop dramatically, leading to sudden collapse and eventual absence of pulse and breathing. If this happens, call for an ambulance immediately. If a CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) - capable person is around, quickly start chest-compression-only CPR. Otherwise, try pressing the chest hard and fast at 100-120 compressions per minute. If an automated external defibrillator (AED) and a trained person are nearby, quickly follow the instruction to give an electric shock to restart the heartbeats.
How our heart works
Our heart consists of 4 chambers â 2 upper chambers or atria and 2 lower chambers or ventricles.
The sinus node in the right upper chamber is a natural pacemaker controlling the heart rhythm. It generates cardiac electric signals propagating to both upper heart chambers and through the AV node to the lower heart chambers. The AV node slows down the electric pulse wave slightly, allowing blood to flow from the upper to fill the lower heart chambers before triggering their contractions. An appropriate contraction sequence of the atriums and ventricles results in an effective cardiac cycle. A healthy heart has a resting heart rate of 50-90 beats per minute.
Causes and Risk Factors of Abnormal Heart Rhythms
The irregular heart rhythm may be caused by
Heredity
Stress
Smoking, drug use, excessive consumption of alcohol or caffeine
Diabetes
High blood pressure
Hyperthyroidism
Hypothyroidism
Sleep apnea
COVID-
19
Heart attack or coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy
Risk factors
High blood pressure
Congenital heart disease
Thyroid disease
Obstructive sleep apnea
Heart disease
Electrolyte imbalances
Certain medications and supplements
Excessive consumption of alcohol
Caffeine, nicotine, or illegal drug use
Complications from
heart arrhythmia
Shortness of breath
Heart failure
Syncope
Heart failure
Blood clots in the heart may travel through arteries to cause blockage in other organs, such as cerebral arteries, which can cause a cerebrovascular accident, and leg arteries, which can cause a lack of blood flow to the feet and legs, leading to gangrene.
Prevention
Eat healthy foods which are beneficial for your heart.
Exercise regularly.
Keep a healthy weight.
Quit smoking.
Avoid alcohol.
Have regular follow-ups or treatment if you have heart disease.
Avoid stress or anger, which can lead to
a
racing heartbeat.
Diagnosis: How Is Heart Arrhythmia Detected?
Your doctor performs a physical exam and reviews your medical history and conditions. You may undergo some tests to diagnose if you have a heart arrhythmia, which types and how severe they are, and to help pinpoint the cause of arrhythmias such as thyroid disease or heart disease.
Typical tests for heart arrhythmias are:
Electrocardiogram
(ECG or EKG)
Holter monitor
Event recorder
Echocardiogram (ECHO)
Implantable loop recorder
Exercise stress test to diagnose a stroke or heart arrhythmia, which may be associated with exercise.
Tilt table test
You will lie supine on a table with monitoring of your blood pressure, heart rate, and EKG. The table is tilted until it looks like you are standing up. This test can check your response to the more upright position. A positive test indicates the cause of syncope due to abnormal neurocardiac reflex.
Cardiac Electrophysiological Testing
Catheters tipped with electrodes are threaded through blood vessels to areas within the heart. The electrodes map out the electrical impulses throughout the heart. A cardiologist will measure cardiac electric current and perform cardiac stimulation according to a standard protocol to diagnose a heart arrhythmia and pinpoint the site of the cardiac abnormality. In most cases, cardiac ablation at the location that causes the condition will solve the problem.
Treatment Options for Heart Arrhythmia
Regular follow-ups may be adequate in some people with heart arrhythmias. However, if the condition aggravates the risk of more severe heart conditions or interferes with your daily life, your doctor may suggest medications, therapies, cardioversion, catheter procedures, or heart surgery.
Medications
Most people with tachycardia need medications to control the heart rhythm. Some people with atrial fibrillation also take blood thinners to prevent the formation of blood clots. Taking the prescribed medications as directed is crucial to lowering the risk of complications.
Therapies
Vagal maneuvers
This method can help slow down your heartbeat by stimulating vagus nerves which control your heart rate. An arrhythmia may stop by coughing, putting your face in cold water, holding your breath, and straining. People with supraventricular tachycardia may try out this approach.
Cardioversion
It is to quickly bring the heart rhythm back to normal by sending an electrical current to the heart through chest electrodes. It is suitable for refractory arrhythmia, not responding to medications, particularly those with no severe underlying conditions such as hypotension, chest congestion, shortness of breath, and heart failure. This method restores normal heartbeat through medications or cardioversion.
Surgery or other procedures
Catheter ablation.
Threading one or more catheters tipped with electrodes through your blood vessels to the heart for radiofrequency ablation of abnormal heart tissue creating tiny scars that block faulty electrical signals and reset your heart rhythm.
Pacemaker
A pacemaker, implanted on the chest wall near the collarbone, connects with an electrode-tipped wire running through a blood vessel to a position at the apex of the heart and will discharge electrical impulses to stabilize the heart rate if slow heartbeats are detected. A pacemaker is usually for people with bradycardias that are not correctable by other means.
Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD)
An ICD implanted under the skin near the collarbone delivers either a high- or low-energy shock to restore normal heartbeats if it detects abnormal heart rhythms. This method is for people with ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest, or higher risks of sudden cardiac arrest.
Coronary bypass surgery
It is for people with heart arrhythmia accompanied by severe coronary artery disease. Coronary bypass surgery improves the blood flow to the heart.
Maze procedure
In patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing open heart surgery for other indications, the doctor may consider adding a concurrent maze procedure to cure the atrial fibrillation.
Lifestyle modification
Stop smoking
Exercise regularly: Try to exercise for 150-300 minutes per week at moderate to high intensity.
Eat
healthily
: Cut salt and trans fats. Eat more fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.
Maintain a healthy weight
Manage blood pressure and cholesterol levels
Stop drinking alcohol.
Attend every follow-up appointment.
Preparation
Consult a cardiologist if you think you have a heart arrhythmia; the earlier the detection, the more successful the treatment is.
If you experience a heart arrhythmia longer than 2-3 minutes, chest pain, shortness of breath, or fainting, call for an ambulance or have someone drive you to the nearest hospital.
What you can do
When making a doctor appointment, ask if you need to do anything in advance, such as food restriction.
Take note of the symptoms you are experiencing â related or unrelated to heart arrhythmia.
List your medical conditions, medications, recent notable life changes, and a family history of stroke, heart disease, hypertension, and diabetes.
Bring someone along to help you remember all the information.
If you have symptoms and have a medical device, check and record your blood pressure, oxygen level, and EKG. There are now wearable gadgets that can record EKG, such as a smart watch.
Article by
Dr Paisan Bunsiricomchai
A specialist doctor in cardiac electrophysiology |
| Markdown | 
 [02-023-3333](<tel:+662 023 3333>)
- ###### Follow Us
[](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/)
- Services
- [Centers & Clinics](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/center-and-specialty)
- [Request an Appointment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/appointment)
- [Find Doctor](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/doctors)
- [Rooms](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/rooms)
- [Insurance](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/insurance)
- [Evergreen Member Card](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/evergreen-memberships)
- [Online Store](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store)
- [Disease & Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)
- [Disease & Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)
- [Lifestyles](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/lifestyles)
- [MedPark Stories](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/medpark-stories)
- [About Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/about-us)
- [About Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/about-us)
- [News & Events](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/news)
- [Join Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/join-us)
- [Awards & Accreditations](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/awards-and-accreditations)
- [Contact Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/contact-us)
- Sign in
- EN
EN
TH
JP
äļæ
EN
EN
TH
JP
äļæ
Account
Sign in
- Services
- [Centers & Clinics](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/center-and-specialty)
- [Request an Appointment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/appointment)
- [Find Doctor](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/doctors)
- [Rooms](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/rooms)
- [Insurance](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/insurance)
- [Evergreen Member Card](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/evergreen-memberships)
- [Online Store](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store)
- [Disease & Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)
- [Disease & Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)
- [Lifestyles](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/lifestyles)
- [MedPark Stories](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/medpark-stories)
- [About Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/about-us)
- [About Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/about-us)
- [News & Events](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/news)
- [Join Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/join-us)
- [Awards & Accreditations](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/awards-and-accreditations)
- [Contact Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/contact-us)
- Languages
EN
EN
TH
JP
äļæ
1. [Home](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/)
2. [Disease and Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)

# Heart arrhythmia
Heart Arrhythmia is an electrical heartbeat abnormalityâbeating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. Common symptoms include palpitations, dizziness, and fatigue. Left untreated, it may lead to heart failure or stroke.
Share
[](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#facebook) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#facebook_messenger) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#x) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#line) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#threads)
## Packages for You
[Heart Health and Heart Disease Screening Package Start āļŋ 6,850.00 āļŋ 11,770.00](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store/heart-screening-package)
[Heart Health and Heart Disease Screening Package Start āļŋ 6,850.00 āļŋ 11,770.00 ](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store/heart-screening-package)
[Advanced Cardiac Screening and Diagnostic Tests Start āļŋ 4,200.00 āļŋ 5,950.00](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store/healthy-heart-screening-program)
[Advanced Cardiac Screening and Diagnostic Tests Start āļŋ 4,200.00 āļŋ 5,950.00 ](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/online-store/healthy-heart-screening-program)
**Choose the topic you want to read.**
- [Heart arrhythmia](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Heart%20arrhythmia)
- [Symptoms](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Symptoms)
- [When to see a doctor](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#When%20to%20see%20a%20doctor)
- [How our heart works](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#How%20our%20heart%20works)
- [Causes](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Causes)
- [Risk factors](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Risk%20factors)
- [Prevention](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Prevention)
- [Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Treatment)
***
## **Heart arrhythmia**
**Heart Arrhythmia** is an electrical heartbeat abnormalityâbeating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. Common symptoms include palpitations, dizziness, and fatigue. Left untreated, it may lead to heart failure or stroke.
People can have a fast heartbeat during exercise or a slow heartbeat while sleeping. When your heart beats irregularly due to faulty electrical signals, it may be due to a heart arrhythmia. You may experience a heart that is racing or fluttering. Some heart arrhythmias can be harmless, while others can be life-threatening.
To treat heart arrhythmia, your doctor may prescribe medications, perform catheter procedures, or device implantation. However, maintaining a healthy lifestyle can lower the risk of developing heart arrhythmias.
## Type of heart arrhythmias
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| **Type** | **Symptoms/Rate** | **Risks** |
| **Tachycardia** | \> 100 bpm | Risk of heart failure or fainting |
| **Bradycardia** | \< 60 bpm | Inadequate blood flow to the brain |
| **Atrial Fibrillation** | Irregular & rapid heartbeats | ****High Risk:**** Stroke & blood clots |
- **Tachycardia (fast heartbeat)** is when the resting heartbeat is over 100 beats per minute.
- **Bradycardia (slow heartbeat)** is when the resting heartbeat is less than 60 beats per minute.
### Tachycardia
can be classified as follows:
- **Atrial fibrillation (A-fib)** results from chaotic cardiac signals, leading to temporary uncoordinated racing heart rhythm. However, left untreated, some people may have a continuous A-fib rhythm. A-fib is associated with other severe complications such as stroke.
- **Atrial flutter** occurs when the atria (upper heartâs chambers) beat too rapidly but more rhythmically than A-fib. It is also associated with
- **Supraventricular tachycardia** develops due to erratic heartbeat in the heartâs upper chambers. It can lead to heart palpitation.
- **Ventricular tachycardia** is the abnormal heart rhythm due to erratic electrical signals in the ventricles (the heartâs lower chambers). The heart beats so fast that there is inadequate blood to fill the ventricles to pump to the body. Ventricular tachycardia may not pose any symptoms in some people with a healthy heart. However, in those with heart disease, it can lead to a medical emergency.
- **Ventricular fibrillation (V-fib)** is the most life-threatening arrhythmic condition because the heart muscles quiver but do not contract or pump blood; there is no blood circulation or pulse. Patients will have cardiac arrest if they do not receive CPR or defibrillation. They will die within a few minutes.
### Bradycardia
- **Sick sinus syndrome** is a heartbeat disorder frequent among the elderly. The scarring near the sinus node can interfere with the flow of electrical current, causing the heart to beat too slowly or stop beating for several seconds, leading to fatigue and syncope. Some may have a tachy-brady syndrome*.*
- **Conduction block** happens when the heartâs electrical pathway is blocked. The electric current from the upper chamber cannot travel to the lower heart chambers slowing down or stopping the heartbeat.
### Premature heartbeats
Premature heartbeats are extra heartbeats that may come from the upper or lower heart chamber. You will feel like your heart is skipping a beat. Usually, they are not alarming but can trigger long-term arrhythmia, particularly in people with heart disease. It can lead to a weak heart in people with frequent and long-standing premature beats. Premature heartbeats can occur when you rest, exercise strenuously or consume stimulants like nicotine or caffeine.
## **Symptoms: What Does Heart Arrhythmia Feel Like?**
The irregular heartbeat may be asymptomatic and could only be detectable during an exam for other medical conditions. However, some signs and symptoms may include:
- Chest pain
- Shortness of breath
- Tachycardia
- Bradycardia
- Fluttering heart
- Dizziness
- Sweating
- Syncope
- Fatigue
- Anxiety
## **When to See a Doctor for Heart Palpitations**
Seek medical attention if you experience shortness of breath, dizziness, fainting, chest pain, and your heartbeat is too fast, too slow, or skipping. Ventricular fibrillation can cause your blood pressure to drop dramatically, leading to sudden collapse and eventual absence of pulse and breathing. If this happens, call for an ambulance immediately. If a CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) - capable person is around, quickly start chest-compression-only CPR. Otherwise, try pressing the chest hard and fast at 100-120 compressions per minute. If an automated external defibrillator (AED) and a trained person are nearby, quickly follow the instruction to give an electric shock to restart the heartbeats.
## **How our heart works**
Our heart consists of 4 chambers â 2 upper chambers or atria and 2 lower chambers or ventricles.
The sinus node in the right upper chamber is a natural pacemaker controlling the heart rhythm. It generates cardiac electric signals propagating to both upper heart chambers and through the AV node to the lower heart chambers. The AV node slows down the electric pulse wave slightly, allowing blood to flow from the upper to fill the lower heart chambers before triggering their contractions. An appropriate contraction sequence of the atriums and ventricles results in an effective cardiac cycle. A healthy heart has a resting heart rate of 50-90 beats per minute.
## **Causes and Risk Factors of Abnormal Heart Rhythms**
The irregular heart rhythm may be caused by
- Heredity
- [Stress](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/stress)
- Smoking, drug use, excessive consumption of alcohol or caffeine
- Diabetes
- High blood pressure
- Hyperthyroidism
- Hypothyroidism
- Sleep apnea
- COVID-19
- Heart attack or coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy
## **Risk factors**
- [High blood pressure](https://www.medparkhospital.com/disease-and-treatment/high-blood-pressure-hypertension)
- Congenital heart disease
- Thyroid disease
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Heart disease
- Electrolyte imbalances
- Certain medications and supplements
- Excessive consumption of alcohol
- Caffeine, nicotine, or illegal drug use
## **Complications from** **heart arrhythmia**
- Shortness of breath
- [Heart failure](https://www.medparkhospital.com/disease-and-treatment/heart-failure)
- Syncope
- Heart failure
- Blood clots in the heart may travel through arteries to cause blockage in other organs, such as cerebral arteries, which can cause a cerebrovascular accident, and leg arteries, which can cause a lack of blood flow to the feet and legs, leading to gangrene.
## **Prevention**
- Eat healthy foods which are beneficial for your heart.
- Exercise regularly.
- Keep a healthy weight.
- Quit smoking.
- Avoid alcohol.
- Have regular follow-ups or treatment if you have heart disease.
- Avoid stress or anger, which can lead to a racing heartbeat.
## **Diagnosis: How Is Heart Arrhythmia Detected?**
Your doctor performs a physical exam and reviews your medical history and conditions. You may undergo some tests to diagnose if you have a heart arrhythmia, which types and how severe they are, and to help pinpoint the cause of arrhythmias such as thyroid disease or heart disease.
Typical tests for heart arrhythmias are:
- **Electrocardiogram** (ECG or EKG)
- **Holter monitor**
- **Event recorder**
- **Echocardiogram (ECHO)**
- **Implantable loop recorder**
- Exercise stress test to diagnose a stroke or heart arrhythmia, which may be associated with exercise.
- **Tilt table test**
You will lie supine on a table with monitoring of your blood pressure, heart rate, and EKG. The table is tilted until it looks like you are standing up. This test can check your response to the more upright position. A positive test indicates the cause of syncope due to abnormal neurocardiac reflex.
- **Cardiac Electrophysiological Testing**
Catheters tipped with electrodes are threaded through blood vessels to areas within the heart. The electrodes map out the electrical impulses throughout the heart. A cardiologist will measure cardiac electric current and perform cardiac stimulation according to a standard protocol to diagnose a heart arrhythmia and pinpoint the site of the cardiac abnormality. In most cases, cardiac ablation at the location that causes the condition will solve the problem.
## **Treatment Options for Heart Arrhythmia**
Regular follow-ups may be adequate in some people with heart arrhythmias. However, if the condition aggravates the risk of more severe heart conditions or interferes with your daily life, your doctor may suggest medications, therapies, cardioversion, catheter procedures, or heart surgery.
## **Medications**
Most people with tachycardia need medications to control the heart rhythm. Some people with atrial fibrillation also take blood thinners to prevent the formation of blood clots. Taking the prescribed medications as directed is crucial to lowering the risk of complications.
### Therapies
- **Vagal maneuvers**
This method can help slow down your heartbeat by stimulating vagus nerves which control your heart rate. An arrhythmia may stop by coughing, putting your face in cold water, holding your breath, and straining. People with supraventricular tachycardia may try out this approach.
- **Cardioversion**
It is to quickly bring the heart rhythm back to normal by sending an electrical current to the heart through chest electrodes. It is suitable for refractory arrhythmia, not responding to medications, particularly those with no severe underlying conditions such as hypotension, chest congestion, shortness of breath, and heart failure. This method restores normal heartbeat through medications or cardioversion.
### Surgery or other procedures
- **Catheter ablation.**
Threading one or more catheters tipped with electrodes through your blood vessels to the heart for radiofrequency ablation of abnormal heart tissue creating tiny scars that block faulty electrical signals and reset your heart rhythm.
- **Pacemaker**
A pacemaker, implanted on the chest wall near the collarbone, connects with an electrode-tipped wire running through a blood vessel to a position at the apex of the heart and will discharge electrical impulses to stabilize the heart rate if slow heartbeats are detected. A pacemaker is usually for people with bradycardias that are not correctable by other means.
- **Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD)**
An ICD implanted under the skin near the collarbone delivers either a high- or low-energy shock to restore normal heartbeats if it detects abnormal heart rhythms. This method is for people with ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest, or higher risks of sudden cardiac arrest.
- **Coronary bypass surgery**
It is for people with heart arrhythmia accompanied by severe coronary artery disease. Coronary bypass surgery improves the blood flow to the heart.
- **Maze procedure**
In patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing open heart surgery for other indications, the doctor may consider adding a concurrent maze procedure to cure the atrial fibrillation.
## **Lifestyle modification**
- Stop smoking
- Exercise regularly: Try to exercise for 150-300 minutes per week at moderate to high intensity.
- Eat healthily: Cut salt and trans fats. Eat more fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.
- Maintain a healthy weight
- Manage blood pressure and cholesterol levels
- Stop drinking alcohol.
- Attend every follow-up appointment.
## **Preparation**
Consult a cardiologist if you think you have a heart arrhythmia; the earlier the detection, the more successful the treatment is.
If you experience a heart arrhythmia longer than 2-3 minutes, chest pain, shortness of breath, or fainting, call for an ambulance or have someone drive you to the nearest hospital.
## **What you can do**
- When making a doctor appointment, ask if you need to do anything in advance, such as food restriction.
- Take note of the symptoms you are experiencing â related or unrelated to heart arrhythmia.
- List your medical conditions, medications, recent notable life changes, and a family history of stroke, heart disease, hypertension, and diabetes.
- Bring someone along to help you remember all the information.
- If you have symptoms and have a medical device, check and record your blood pressure, oxygen level, and EKG. There are now wearable gadgets that can record EKG, such as a smart watch.
## Article by
- 
Dr Paisan Bunsiricomchai A specialist doctor in cardiac electrophysiology
[Profile](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/doctors/dr-paisan-bunsiricomchai) [Appointment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/appointment?doctor=dr-paisan-bunsiricomchai)
Published: 23 Jan 2023
Share
[](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#facebook) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#facebook_messenger) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#x) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#line) [](https://www.medparkhospital.com/#threads)
## Medical Service
[Centers & Clinics](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/center-and-specialty)
[Request an Appointment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/appointment)
[Find Doctor](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/doctors)
[Rooms](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/rooms)
[Insurance](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/insurance)
[Evergreen Member Card](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/evergreen-memberships)
## Disease & Treatment
[Disease & Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment)
[Lifestyles](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/lifestyles)
[MedPark Stories](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/medpark-stories)
[MedPark Research Center](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/page/medpark-research-center)
## About Us
[Visitor's Guide](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/static/visitor-guide)
[About Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/about-us)
[News & Events](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/news)
[Join Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/join-us)
[Contact Us](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/contact-us)
[Awards & Accreditations](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/awards-and-accreditations)
## Terms Of Use
[Term & Conditions](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/page/terms-conditions)
[Privacy Policy](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/page/privacy-policy)
[Privacy Notice](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/page/privacy-notice)
[Cookie Policy](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/page/cookie-policy)

3333 Rama IV Rd, Khlong Toei, Bangkok 10110
ÂĐ 2026 MedPark Hospital.
All Rights Reserved.
2\.3.42 (build d92801c)

â
Thanks for sharing\!
[AddToAny](https://www.addtoany.com/ "Share Buttons")
[MoreâĶ](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#addtoany "Show all")

Cart (0 Item)

Your cart is empty
Explore our health packages and promotions now to enjoy the best offers\!
Explore packages
\*Total amount exceeds maximum limit (2,000,000 Baht). Please remove some items to checkout.
***
Total
Check out
### Add to Cart Unsuccessful
Ok |
| Readable Markdown | **Choose the topic you want to read.**
- [Heart arrhythmia](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Heart%20arrhythmia)
- [Symptoms](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Symptoms)
- [When to see a doctor](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#When%20to%20see%20a%20doctor)
- [How our heart works](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#How%20our%20heart%20works)
- [Causes](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Causes)
- [Risk factors](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Risk%20factors)
- [Prevention](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Prevention)
- [Treatment](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia#Treatment)
***
**Heart Arrhythmia** is an electrical heartbeat abnormalityâbeating too fast, too slow, or irregularly. Common symptoms include palpitations, dizziness, and fatigue. Left untreated, it may lead to heart failure or stroke.
People can have a fast heartbeat during exercise or a slow heartbeat while sleeping. When your heart beats irregularly due to faulty electrical signals, it may be due to a heart arrhythmia. You may experience a heart that is racing or fluttering. Some heart arrhythmias can be harmless, while others can be life-threatening.
To treat heart arrhythmia, your doctor may prescribe medications, perform catheter procedures, or device implantation. However, maintaining a healthy lifestyle can lower the risk of developing heart arrhythmias.
## Type of heart arrhythmias
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| **Type** | **Symptoms/Rate** | **Risks** |
| **Tachycardia** | \> 100 bpm | Risk of heart failure or fainting |
| **Bradycardia** | \< 60 bpm | Inadequate blood flow to the brain |
| **Atrial Fibrillation** | Irregular & rapid heartbeats | ****High Risk:**** Stroke & blood clots |
- **Tachycardia (fast heartbeat)** is when the resting heartbeat is over 100 beats per minute.
- **Bradycardia (slow heartbeat)** is when the resting heartbeat is less than 60 beats per minute.
### Tachycardia
can be classified as follows:
- **Atrial fibrillation (A-fib)** results from chaotic cardiac signals, leading to temporary uncoordinated racing heart rhythm. However, left untreated, some people may have a continuous A-fib rhythm. A-fib is associated with other severe complications such as stroke.
- **Atrial flutter** occurs when the atria (upper heartâs chambers) beat too rapidly but more rhythmically than A-fib. It is also associated with
- **Supraventricular tachycardia** develops due to erratic heartbeat in the heartâs upper chambers. It can lead to heart palpitation.
- **Ventricular tachycardia** is the abnormal heart rhythm due to erratic electrical signals in the ventricles (the heartâs lower chambers). The heart beats so fast that there is inadequate blood to fill the ventricles to pump to the body. Ventricular tachycardia may not pose any symptoms in some people with a healthy heart. However, in those with heart disease, it can lead to a medical emergency.
- **Ventricular fibrillation (V-fib)** is the most life-threatening arrhythmic condition because the heart muscles quiver but do not contract or pump blood; there is no blood circulation or pulse. Patients will have cardiac arrest if they do not receive CPR or defibrillation. They will die within a few minutes.
### Bradycardia
- **Sick sinus syndrome** is a heartbeat disorder frequent among the elderly. The scarring near the sinus node can interfere with the flow of electrical current, causing the heart to beat too slowly or stop beating for several seconds, leading to fatigue and syncope. Some may have a tachy-brady syndrome*.*
- **Conduction block** happens when the heartâs electrical pathway is blocked. The electric current from the upper chamber cannot travel to the lower heart chambers slowing down or stopping the heartbeat.
### Premature heartbeats
Premature heartbeats are extra heartbeats that may come from the upper or lower heart chamber. You will feel like your heart is skipping a beat. Usually, they are not alarming but can trigger long-term arrhythmia, particularly in people with heart disease. It can lead to a weak heart in people with frequent and long-standing premature beats. Premature heartbeats can occur when you rest, exercise strenuously or consume stimulants like nicotine or caffeine.
## **Symptoms: What Does Heart Arrhythmia Feel Like?**
The irregular heartbeat may be asymptomatic and could only be detectable during an exam for other medical conditions. However, some signs and symptoms may include:
- Chest pain
- Shortness of breath
- Tachycardia
- Bradycardia
- Fluttering heart
- Dizziness
- Sweating
- Syncope
- Fatigue
- Anxiety
## **When to See a Doctor for Heart Palpitations**
Seek medical attention if you experience shortness of breath, dizziness, fainting, chest pain, and your heartbeat is too fast, too slow, or skipping. Ventricular fibrillation can cause your blood pressure to drop dramatically, leading to sudden collapse and eventual absence of pulse and breathing. If this happens, call for an ambulance immediately. If a CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) - capable person is around, quickly start chest-compression-only CPR. Otherwise, try pressing the chest hard and fast at 100-120 compressions per minute. If an automated external defibrillator (AED) and a trained person are nearby, quickly follow the instruction to give an electric shock to restart the heartbeats.
## **How our heart works**
Our heart consists of 4 chambers â 2 upper chambers or atria and 2 lower chambers or ventricles.
The sinus node in the right upper chamber is a natural pacemaker controlling the heart rhythm. It generates cardiac electric signals propagating to both upper heart chambers and through the AV node to the lower heart chambers. The AV node slows down the electric pulse wave slightly, allowing blood to flow from the upper to fill the lower heart chambers before triggering their contractions. An appropriate contraction sequence of the atriums and ventricles results in an effective cardiac cycle. A healthy heart has a resting heart rate of 50-90 beats per minute.
## **Causes and Risk Factors of Abnormal Heart Rhythms**
The irregular heart rhythm may be caused by
- Heredity
- [Stress](https://www.medparkhospital.com/en-US/disease-and-treatment/stress)
- Smoking, drug use, excessive consumption of alcohol or caffeine
- Diabetes
- High blood pressure
- Hyperthyroidism
- Hypothyroidism
- Sleep apnea
- COVID-19
- Heart attack or coronary artery disease, cardiomyopathy
## **Risk factors**
- [High blood pressure](https://www.medparkhospital.com/disease-and-treatment/high-blood-pressure-hypertension)
- Congenital heart disease
- Thyroid disease
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Heart disease
- Electrolyte imbalances
- Certain medications and supplements
- Excessive consumption of alcohol
- Caffeine, nicotine, or illegal drug use
## **Complications from** **heart arrhythmia**
- Shortness of breath
- [Heart failure](https://www.medparkhospital.com/disease-and-treatment/heart-failure)
- Syncope
- Heart failure
- Blood clots in the heart may travel through arteries to cause blockage in other organs, such as cerebral arteries, which can cause a cerebrovascular accident, and leg arteries, which can cause a lack of blood flow to the feet and legs, leading to gangrene.
## **Prevention**
- Eat healthy foods which are beneficial for your heart.
- Exercise regularly.
- Keep a healthy weight.
- Quit smoking.
- Avoid alcohol.
- Have regular follow-ups or treatment if you have heart disease.
- Avoid stress or anger, which can lead to a racing heartbeat.
## **Diagnosis: How Is Heart Arrhythmia Detected?**
Your doctor performs a physical exam and reviews your medical history and conditions. You may undergo some tests to diagnose if you have a heart arrhythmia, which types and how severe they are, and to help pinpoint the cause of arrhythmias such as thyroid disease or heart disease.
Typical tests for heart arrhythmias are:
- **Electrocardiogram** (ECG or EKG)
- **Holter monitor**
- **Event recorder**
- **Echocardiogram (ECHO)**
- **Implantable loop recorder**
- Exercise stress test to diagnose a stroke or heart arrhythmia, which may be associated with exercise.
- **Tilt table test**
You will lie supine on a table with monitoring of your blood pressure, heart rate, and EKG. The table is tilted until it looks like you are standing up. This test can check your response to the more upright position. A positive test indicates the cause of syncope due to abnormal neurocardiac reflex.
- **Cardiac Electrophysiological Testing**
Catheters tipped with electrodes are threaded through blood vessels to areas within the heart. The electrodes map out the electrical impulses throughout the heart. A cardiologist will measure cardiac electric current and perform cardiac stimulation according to a standard protocol to diagnose a heart arrhythmia and pinpoint the site of the cardiac abnormality. In most cases, cardiac ablation at the location that causes the condition will solve the problem.
## **Treatment Options for Heart Arrhythmia**
Regular follow-ups may be adequate in some people with heart arrhythmias. However, if the condition aggravates the risk of more severe heart conditions or interferes with your daily life, your doctor may suggest medications, therapies, cardioversion, catheter procedures, or heart surgery.
## **Medications**
Most people with tachycardia need medications to control the heart rhythm. Some people with atrial fibrillation also take blood thinners to prevent the formation of blood clots. Taking the prescribed medications as directed is crucial to lowering the risk of complications.
### Therapies
- **Vagal maneuvers**
This method can help slow down your heartbeat by stimulating vagus nerves which control your heart rate. An arrhythmia may stop by coughing, putting your face in cold water, holding your breath, and straining. People with supraventricular tachycardia may try out this approach.
- **Cardioversion**
It is to quickly bring the heart rhythm back to normal by sending an electrical current to the heart through chest electrodes. It is suitable for refractory arrhythmia, not responding to medications, particularly those with no severe underlying conditions such as hypotension, chest congestion, shortness of breath, and heart failure. This method restores normal heartbeat through medications or cardioversion.
### Surgery or other procedures
- **Catheter ablation.**
Threading one or more catheters tipped with electrodes through your blood vessels to the heart for radiofrequency ablation of abnormal heart tissue creating tiny scars that block faulty electrical signals and reset your heart rhythm.
- **Pacemaker**
A pacemaker, implanted on the chest wall near the collarbone, connects with an electrode-tipped wire running through a blood vessel to a position at the apex of the heart and will discharge electrical impulses to stabilize the heart rate if slow heartbeats are detected. A pacemaker is usually for people with bradycardias that are not correctable by other means.
- **Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD)**
An ICD implanted under the skin near the collarbone delivers either a high- or low-energy shock to restore normal heartbeats if it detects abnormal heart rhythms. This method is for people with ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest, or higher risks of sudden cardiac arrest.
- **Coronary bypass surgery**
It is for people with heart arrhythmia accompanied by severe coronary artery disease. Coronary bypass surgery improves the blood flow to the heart.
- **Maze procedure**
In patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing open heart surgery for other indications, the doctor may consider adding a concurrent maze procedure to cure the atrial fibrillation.
## **Lifestyle modification**
- Stop smoking
- Exercise regularly: Try to exercise for 150-300 minutes per week at moderate to high intensity.
- Eat healthily: Cut salt and trans fats. Eat more fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.
- Maintain a healthy weight
- Manage blood pressure and cholesterol levels
- Stop drinking alcohol.
- Attend every follow-up appointment.
## **Preparation**
Consult a cardiologist if you think you have a heart arrhythmia; the earlier the detection, the more successful the treatment is.
If you experience a heart arrhythmia longer than 2-3 minutes, chest pain, shortness of breath, or fainting, call for an ambulance or have someone drive you to the nearest hospital.
## **What you can do**
- When making a doctor appointment, ask if you need to do anything in advance, such as food restriction.
- Take note of the symptoms you are experiencing â related or unrelated to heart arrhythmia.
- List your medical conditions, medications, recent notable life changes, and a family history of stroke, heart disease, hypertension, and diabetes.
- Bring someone along to help you remember all the information.
- If you have symptoms and have a medical device, check and record your blood pressure, oxygen level, and EKG. There are now wearable gadgets that can record EKG, such as a smart watch.
## Article by
- 
Dr Paisan Bunsiricomchai A specialist doctor in cardiac electrophysiology |
| Shard | 82 (laksa) |
| Root Hash | 17995140150215241882 |
| Unparsed URL | com,medparkhospital!www,/en-US/disease-and-treatment/heart-arrhythmia s443 |