What is the chamber pacemaker?
2 In the surgery of cardiological specialists, what is called the pulse of the chamber pacemaker, implanted into the thoracic wall with a wire attached to the muscle in the right lower heart chamber or right chamber. If the heart rhythm completely disappears or becomes too slow, the pacemaker is activated and sends the pulses to the right ventricle, causing it to tighten and send blood to the lungs. The impulses spread from the right ventricle to the left chamber and IT was withdrawing at the same time and sending blood around the body.
Since the heart has its own pacemaker, which consists of specialized cells that create impulses and cause the heart chambers to withdraw, artificial cardiac is needed when natural work is natural. Problems may arise when tissue is damaged after a heart attack, or when a condition called Heart provides CK, which stops the spread of electrical pulses through conductive tissue. They may occur slow or irregular heart rhythmsAnd the ventricular pacemaker may be required in cases where the lead between the upper chambers or the hall and the chambers has been lost in a state known as a complete heart block.
Thepulse generator in the chamber pacemaker has a battery that usually takes up to ten years. While the battery rarely fails unexpectedly, there may be a number of other complications that apply to any permanent pacemaker and the chamber pacemaker. Lead wire can move from position and cause tissue damage, which in extreme cases could perforate the wall of the heart chamber and require surgical treatment. Infections may also be resolved and may require antibiotic therapy.
A special risk of using a chamber pacemaker is what is known as a pacemaker syndrome where the network is downloading while the valves are separating from the chambers closed so that blood flows in the wrong wayand the heart output decreases, leading to a drop in blood pressure. Dizziness and fainting may occur, or in more severe cases, heart failure symptoms may be observed with liquid in the lungs and swollen ankles. The condition can often be resolved by reprogramming the ventricular pacemaker or by changing the system to the system known as the stimulation with a double chamber, where the guidance passes to the right atrium and right ventricle, which regulates the contraction of both.
In cases of congestive heart failure, where the chambers cannot defeat together, an ordinary chamber pacemaker may not be enough and what is called a biventricular pacemaker. Here the guidance is located inside both chambers and right halls. The device is usually given to patients with relatively serious heart failure, for which drugs do not provide relief and have been found to reduce symptoms in approximately half of all these users.