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Understanding is the key to finding answers.
Accurate information is the key to better healthcare. Continuous heart monitoring gives your doctor important information about your health that can help with diagnosis and treatment of underlying heart conditions.
Conditions that heart monitoring is often used to diagnose or manage include:
Fainting is a common problem accounting for 740,000 emergency department visits in the U.S. each year.1 Half of patients admitted to the hospital leave without a diagnosis.2 People faint for many reasons but it can be a sign of an underlying heart condition.
Heart palpitations are relatively common, accounting for 16% of symptoms that cause patients to go to their primary care doctor.3-5 While they are usually harmless, heart palpitations can be a sign of a more serious heart condition.
Atrial fibrillation is a common condition in which the upper chambers of the heart beat very fast and irregularly, so the heart can’t pump blood effectively to the rest of the body. Left untreated, it can lead to stroke.
A stroke happens when a blood vessel in the brain is suddenly blocked or bursts, resulting in damage to the brain tissue. The majority of strokes occur as a result of an obstruction, such as a blood clot. Atrial fibrillation is a major risk factor for stroke. An unexplained (or cryptogenic) stroke is a stroke of unknown cause, which requires further testing.
Sun BC, Emond JA, Camargo CA Jr. Inconsistent electrocardiographic testing for syncope in United States emergency departments. Am J Cardiol. May 15, 2004;93(10):1306-1308.
Mendu ML, McAvay G, Lampert R, Stoehr J, Tinetti ME. Yield of diagnostic tests in evaluating syncopal episodes in older patients. Arch Intern Med. July 27, 2009;169(14):1299-1305.
Mayou R. Chest pain, palpitations and panic. J Psychosom Res . 1998;44:53-70.
Kroenke K, Arringon ME, Mangelsdroff AD. The prevalence of symptoms in medical outpatients and the adequacy of therapy. Arch Intern Med. 1990;150:1685-9.
Knudson MP. The natural history of palpitations in a family practice. J Fam Pract. 1987;24:357-60.