What You Need To Know About Heart Ablation
Foremost, it's important that you understand what heart ablation refers to. Heart ablation is one of the several treatments which can be offered to th...
Foremost, it’s important that you understand what heart ablation refers to. Heart ablation is one of the several treatments which can be offered to the heart when it develops an abnormal heart rhythm. An abnormal heart rhythm is developed when a person experiences cardiac arrhythmia also known as dysrrhythmia. In establishing this condition, the cardiologist will use a thin flexible tube called a catheter. This is an instrument which the cardiologist will use through its insertion into the heart of the patient. The catheter is used in conjunction with another machine specialized for the function. The machine is used to deliver energy to the heart through the catheter. The energy is delivered specifically to the parts which are causing the arrhythmia; the parts are mostly in the heart muscles. Whenever the energy is delivered, it will immediately disconnect the routes of the irregular rhythm.
However, the catheter heart ablation can also be used for other functions. It’s also useful in the cutting off of electrical routes which acts as the connection between the ventricles and the atria. This connection is also known to some people as the connection between the lower chambers and the upper chambers of the heart. Arrhythmia differs from one person to the other based on a number of factors. For this reason, a cardiologist will only perform a heart ablation which suits the condition or the type of abnormal heart rhythm that a patient is experiencing.
Apart from the above functions or uses of the heart ablation, there are still other uses which include the treatment of AV Nodal Reentrant Tachycardia, Fibrillation of the Atria, Accessory pathway treatment, Atrial flutter treatment and treatment of Ventricular tachycardia. It should also be noted that not every abnormal heart rhythm has to be treated through heart ablation. The doctor will have to first conduct thorough evaluation into the condition to be able to establish whether it warrants for heart ablation. The evaluation will cover areas such as the evaluation of the patient’s medical history, conclusive physical examination, Echo, Electrocardiogram, holster monitor test and other tests which are to be carried out in the laboratory.
After the evaluation, the cardiologist will have to discuss with the patient based on the results of the evaluation the possibility of conducting the heart ablation. The doctor will only make recommendations, however the decision of undertaking the treatment will lie on the patient since the doctor may also be able to give other options. Generally, just like in other treatments, heart ablation is safe procedure but also has risks which the doctor has to be very careful with since the treatment affects one of the vital body organs and any mistake might be very costly.