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The “Befores” and “Afters” of Arrhythmias and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. Brought to you by: Andy Lutzkanin Sara Farag. What Andy wants you to know…. What is an arrhythmia? What are some warning signs? What are some complications? Two basic types of arrhythmia.
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The “Befores” and “Afters” of Arrhythmias and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Brought to you by: Andy Lutzkanin Sara Farag
What Andy wants you to know… • What is an arrhythmia? • What are some warning signs? • What are some complications? • Two basic types of arrhythmia. • How do we doctors treat arrhythmias? • What can you do to prevent arrhythmias?
What is an arrhythmia? • “Normal cardiac function relies on the flow of electrical impulses through the heart in an exquisitely coordinated fashion.” • Any abnormality in this rhythm of the heart is by definition an arrhythmia.
Symptoms and Signs • What kinds of things did we see with little Jimmy? • Rapid heart rate, sweating, restlessnes, difficulty breathing, passed out • Some others you may see: • Dizziness, blurred vision, chest pain, palpitations (feeling of irregular heartbeats), anxiety
So why are arrhythmias bad? • Every day problems: • Uncomfortable, can fall and injure yourself (what if you are old and frail and you fall?) • Longer term problems: • Damage to heart, kidneys, brain, etc. • Why? • Worst case scenario: Ineffective pumping=poor blood flow to organs Sudden Cardiac Death
Types of Arrhythmias Paroxysmal Reentrant Tachycardias Sick Sinus Syndrome Ventricular Tachycardia Atrial Premature Beats Ectopic Atrial Tachycardia Junctional Escape Rhythm Multifocal Atrial Tachycardia Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardias Sinus Bradycardia Atrial Fibrillation Conduction Blocks Ventricular Escape Rhythm Sinus Bradycardia Sinus Tachycardia Atrial Flutter Ventricular Fibrillation Torsades de pointes Wolf-Parkinson-White Syndrome Ventricular Premature Beats
Three Basic Types • Increased Automaticity • “Too many chiefs, not enough Indians” • Rob’s example: grandma at thanksgiving • Triggered Events - Not important! • Reentry • “dog chasing its tail”
“Too many chiefs…” • What normally controls the heart? • SA node is automatic - this is why transplants work • Other parts of heart may become automatic • Recall Rob’s demo with grandma at the Thanksgiving table
“Dog chasing its tail” • Birth defect or damage to heart causes a loop to form in conduction system • Electrical signal will just travel through loop over and over • Loops can be big or small
Great, you have a problem. Now what? • What types of treatment are there? • Drugs • Surgery • Shock the heart (AED or manual defibrillator) • Implantable device (defibrillator or pacemaker)
Some important drugs… • Epinephrine • aka adrenaline • Produced in adrenal glands • “fight or flight” response • Causes heart to beat stronger and faster • Atropine • Originally found in Jimsonweed and deadly nightshade plants • Causes SA node to fire more often • Very toxic at high doses - causes ventricular fibrillation
“Individual results may vary…” • Drugs • Most have dangerous side effects including causing new arrhythmias • Surgery • Not always useful • Can cause further damage • Defibrillators • Only fix life threatening situations • Can cause further damage • Sometimes unable to save
Preventing Arrhythmias • Structure important for ___________ • Congenital defects - are they preventable? Unfortunately not • Damage to heart - is it preventable? YES!!!! • What is a risk factor?
Preventing Arrhythmias • Cardiac Risk Factors • Smoking • High cholesterol • High blood pressure • Diabetes/Obesity • Age • Gender • Eliminate these factors, your risk of damaging the heart goes down!
What Sara wants you to know… REVIEW Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) Lifestyle Changes Prevention
Let’s review, what is HCM again? What are the differences between a normal heart and one with HCM? Normal HCM
In Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy… • Asymmetric myocardium thickening (especially in septum) • Decreased filling • High outflow velocity • High pressure • Difficulty breathing Normal HCM
In Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy… • Abnormal growth of muscle fibers • Messy conduction • Arrhythmias Normal HCM
Since HCM is genetic, there aren’t good treatments for it. Making lifestyle changes is very important…
Children experience slow growth because the body uses up all of its calories compensating for the heart’s hard work. HIGH calorie, LOW fat, LOW sodium diet with lots of fluids is important!
Vigorous activities should be avoided but moving around is EXTREMELY important.
How does HCM affect social life? • Teachers/nurses should be aware of condition in school • Occupation should have low physical demand
Support Groups: www.childrenscardiomyopathy.org/site/listserve.php
What can we do to catch a problem early on? • Look at family history • Problems? Consider genetic screening • Blood pressure checks every 2 years • 120/80 mm Hg or less is GREAT • Cholesterol checks every 5 years • Total should be less than 200 mg/dL
THANK YOU! Any questions?