Does Your Heart Ever Skip a Beat?

Atrial fibrillation (AF)is the most common irregular heart rhythm disorder in the United States, affecting about 2.2 million Americans. In short, AF can be described as an abnormal heart-beat, rapid and disorganized. This may not sound so bad until you find out that due to upper heart muscle function irregularity, blood is not pumped completely out of the heart’s upper chamber therefore clotting may occur and become lodged in a brain artery causing stroke. About 15 percent of strokes occur in persons with AF. Developing AF increases with age particularly for persons over 60, up to 5% of persons over 65 have AF.

What causes AF?


Some of the most common causes of AF involve heart conditions such as hypertension, coronary artery disease, heart valve disease, but approximately 10% of cases may be related to alcohol consumption, excessive caffeine, extreme fatigue, emotional stress, severe infections, and recreational drug use.

What are the Symptoms of AF?


Some people have AF without symptoms and they can vary in severity from person to person.
Symptoms can include:

  • Generally feeling unwell.
  • Heart palpitations or fluttering sensation in the chest
  • Chest pain or discomfort
  • Dizziness, light-headed feeling
  • Weakness, over-tired, and lack of energy

    Treating with Ablation

    Treating Atrial fibrillation (AF) with ablation or pulmonary vein antral isolation, results in a complete cure from atrial fibrillation in more than 90% of patients. To achieve these results, some patients may require two procedures. Highly trained cardiac electrophysiologists using radiofrequency energy to destroy very small, carefully selected group of tissues in the left atrium, pulmonary veins, and superior vena cava that start and maintain atrial fibrillation preform the procedure. Special technology is utilized to visualize and reconstruct the heart’s anatomy in three-dimensional (3-D) images providing a safer procedure.

    Ablation cures AF by scarring of the tissues surrounding the pulmonary veins, left atrium, and superior vena cava with radiofrequency ablation eliminating and/or isolates the triggers that start and maintain AF.

    Chronic treatment of AF with antiarrhythmic medications is effective approximately 50% of the time, and may cause significant side effects. Use of Coumadin to minimize the risk for stroke associated with AF is often inconvenient for patients and carries a higher risk for bleeding. Curing AF can eliminate the need for lifelong treatment with medications, and significantly improve the patient’s quality of life. Read our procedure profile on AF ablation to learn more about this exciting technique for treating Atrial Fibrillation.