How does an electrophysiologist planning a cardiac ablation approach an arrhythmia that is intermittent?
Some arrhythmias are intermittent, but still serious enough to consider surgery. Many days I have 20%, perhaps even 30%, PVC loading (premature ventricular contractions) for several hours or more. (Note: 20% PVC loading means that 20% of my heartbeats are PVCs) So my electrophysiologist recommends intervention because over time these PVCs are damaging my heart. I accept this is a good idea, since I want to keep my heart healthy.
However, some days I only an occasional PVC, or even have 0 PVCs. Other days I have 0 PVCs in the morning, but after exercising I have PVCs for several hours. So I'm not sure if the surgical team will see the problem while I'm on the table. All my engineering experience tells me it is very hard to fix a problem you cannot recreate.
When an arrhythmia is intermittent, how does the electrophysiologist know what to ablate during surgery? I have seen a reference to using a drug to force the heart into arrhythmia; but how would the surgeon know if the arrhythmia they forced the heart into is the patient's real problem?
I'm not finding much information about this aspect of cardiac ablations. I have emailed questions to my electrophysiologist, but I've not yet heard from their office. I will appreciate any references to medical reports, personal experience, etc. I want to get some background so I can have a useful conversation with my electrophysiologist. Thank you!
Some arrhythmias are intermittent, but still serious enough to consider surgery. Many days I have 20%, perhaps even 30%, PVC loading (premature ventricular contractions) for several hours or more. (Note: 20% PVC loading means that 20% of my heartbeats are PVCs) So my electrophysiologist recommends intervention because over time these PVCs are damaging my heart. I accept this is a good idea, since I want to keep my heart healthy.
However, some days I only an occasional PVC, or even have 0 PVCs. Other days I have 0 PVCs in the morning, but after exercising I have PVCs for several hours. So I'm not sure if the surgical team will see the problem while I'm on the table. All my engineering experience tells me it is very hard to fix a problem you cannot recreate.
When an arrhythmia is intermittent, how does the electrophysiologist know what to ablate during surgery? I have seen a reference to using a drug to force the heart into arrhythmia; but how would the surgeon know if the arrhythmia they forced the heart into is the patient's real problem?
I'm not finding much information about this aspect of cardiac ablations. I have emailed questions to my electrophysiologist, but I've not yet heard from their office. I will appreciate any references to medical reports, personal experience, etc. I want to get some background so I can have a useful conversation with my electrophysiologist. Thank you!