permanent pacemakers; implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; ablation therapy; heart surgery, including the Maze procedure and the pulmonary vein isolation procedure
Most cardioversions are successful and, at least for a time, restore the normal heart rhythm.
Defibrillation also known as cardioversion.
Cardioversion is used to stop this abnormal beating so that the heart can begin normal rhythm and pump more efficiently.
Cardioversion
Cardioversion, the electric shock to the chest wall, is usually performed emergencies. This device briefly suspends the heart's activity and allows it to return to a normal rhythm
During the process of cardioversion, an electrical shock is delivered to the heart in an attempt to change an irregular heart beat rhythm into a normal one.
Reconstruction.
yes
There is no such thing as a normal sinus respiration. I assume you meant, normal sinus rhythm. (seeing that arrhythmia deals with the heart and not the lungs). An intervention will depend solely on the type of arrhythmia (e.g. atrial, ventricular). Cardioversion is usually done. Cardioversion is either the administration of antiarrhythimics such as amiodarone or sending synchronized electrical currents to the heart. Defibrillation is only done when Ventricular Tachycardia (without a pulse) or Ventricular Fibrillation occurs.
92960
Yes
Management options for paroxysmal atrial fibrillation includes cardioversion with drugs, electrical cardioversion, medications for maintaining a normal heart rhythm and heart rate control, atrioventricular node ablation, radiofrequency catheter ablation, surgical maze procedure, and medications for preventing blood clots.