Tuesday 14 October 2008

What Is An ECG

What is an electrocardiogram?

An electrocardiogram or 'ECG' records the electrical activity of the heart. The heart produces tiny electrical impulses which spread through the heart muscle to make the heart contract. These impulses can be detected by the ECG machine. You may have an ECG to help find the cause of symptoms such as palpitations or chest pain. Sometimes it is done as part of routine tests, for example, before you have an operation.

The ECG test is painless and harmless. (The ECG machine records electrical impulses coming from your body - it does not put any electricity into your body.)

How is it done?

Small metal electrodes are stuck onto your arms, legs and chest. Wires from the electrodes are connected to the ECG machine. The machine detects and amplifies the electrical impulses that occur each heartbeat and records them onto a paper or computer. A few heartbeats are recorded from different sets of electrodes. The test takes about five minutes to do.

What does an ECG show?

The electrodes on the different parts of the body detect electrical impulses coming from different directions within the heart. There are normal patterns for each electrode. Various heart disorders produce abnormal patterns. The heart disorders that can be detected include:

Abnormal heart rhythms.

If the heart rate is very fast, very slow, or irregular. There are various types of irregular heart rhythm with characteristic ECG patterns.

A heart attack, and if it was recent or some time ago.

A heart attack causes damage to heart muscle, and heals with scar tissue. These can be detected by abnormal ECG patterns.

An enlarged heart.

Basically this causes bigger impulses than normal.Limitations of the ECG

An ECG is a simple and valuable test. Sometimes it can definitely diagnose a heart problem. However, a normal ECG does not rule out serious heart disease. For example, you may have an irregular heart rhythm that 'comes and goes', and the recording can be normal between episodes. Also, not all heart attacks can be detected by ECG. Angina, a common heart disorder, cannot usually be detected by a routine ECG. Specialised ECG recordings sometimes help to overcome some limitations. For example:

Exercise ECG.

This is where the tracing is done when you exercise (on a treadmill or exercise bike). This helps to assess the severity of the narrowing of the coronary arteries which causes angina.

24 hour ECG monitor.

This is where you wear a small monitor for 24 hours which constantly records your heart rhythm. It aims to detect abnormal heart rhythms that may 'come and go'.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Thanks for the info Lynne. My sister and I were seperately, unknowingly diagnosed with POTs recentl (around the same time-which makes you think it might be genetic in some people atleast). Just to let people who may read your great blog know-we both had ECG abnormalties that were unexplained-which means POTS can affect the function so much so that it can actually look like a blockage or as if one has had a heart attack (although heart attack enzymes are not present-which is a useful indicator). I hope you find an improvement of your symptoms. I use lots of water to control my POTS and have managed to start exercising again, since if I don't I feel worse and don't even want to get out of bed. yes, big meals late at night are the worst for heart palps/arrythmias.
Best of luck
Francesca