Advanced

   

 

home about cry contacts  medical info  screening fundraising

counselling

research news

Every beat counts ....

Wrexham Evening Leader - 7th June  2006 

Also appeared in Flintshire and Chester Evening Leader

 

Some people, like my patient, have dramatic and life threatening irregularities affecting their heart beat. 

 

Others have less obvious symptoms but nevertheless need investigation and treatment. 

 

There is a normal electrical cycle of the heart that occurs with every heartbeat.  An arrhythmia occurs when this electrical cycle is disturbed.  Normally, tiny electrical currents activate the top part of the heart, (the atria), just before the bottom part of the heart.  These are the ventricles, the muscular chambers that pump the blood to the lungs and around the body. 

 

The most common type of abnormality is atrial fibrillation.  Here the upper chambers of the heart beat fast and irregular.  This arrhythmia  gets much more common with old age, and some 500,000 people in the UK have it.  Even where atrial fibrillation produces few symptoms, it can give rise to an increased risk of strokes.  It is the main reason why a person may find themselves on warfarin treatment.  Most other arrhythmias arising from the top of the heart - supraventricular - are troublesome, but not life-threatening.  Some new treatments such as using a catheter to 'zap' twitchy heart tissue now offers a virtual cure. 

 

Many arrhythmias which arise from the bottom chambers, (ventricles), are potentially life-threatening, they can be harder to treat, and often require powerful drugs and implantable defibrillators.  Sometimes similar technology called 'pacemakers' are used, here a tiny current is delivered to ensure that the heartbeat is maintained at a regular, acceptable rate.  Worrying to many people are abnormalities that affect the young and which have been linked to sudden cardiac arrest and death.  CRY (Cardiac Risk in the Young) a charity devoted to research and prevention of such deaths will be present at the conference mentioned above.  Families will have the opportunity to discuss worries concerning the risks of sudden cardiac death in their young people, find our ways in which at risk individuals can be screened and what treatments are available.  

         

 

 

search & site map

brochure request

my story

links

q & a

donate to CRY


Call us at 01737 363 222 or email us at cry@c-r-y.org.uk

 CRY,
Unit 7, Epsom Downs Metro Centre, Waterfield, Tadworth, Surrey, KT20 5LR
A Company Limited by Guarantee.  Registered in England No. 3052965

Registered Office 35 - 37 Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1 0BY.  Registered Charity No. 1050845
All Copyright reserved by Cardiac Risk in the Young