Treatment Overview
Treatment for
bradycardia depends on its underlying cause, whether
it is causing symptoms, and whether it is likely to get worse. After your
doctor knows the exact cause of your slow heart rate, he or she will determine
which treatment you need.
Typically, bradycardia needs to be treated if it is causing
symptoms such as
fainting or severe, disabling fatigue.
Initial treatment
In an emergency situation when the heart rate slows suddenly,
such as after a heart attack, you may need medicines given
intravenously for a short time to increase your heart
rate.
If another heart condition has damaged your heart's electrical
system, your doctor will check to see whether a
pacemaker is right for you. You may receive a
temporary pacemaker until a permanent pacemaker can be
placed.
If an underlying disease, such as
hypothyroidism or abnormal
potassium levels, is causing your slow heart rate,
your doctor will treat that condition. If your
bradycardia is caused by heart medicines, such as
beta-blockers,
calcium channel blockers,
antiarrhythmics, or
digoxin, your doctor will try to adjust your
medicines.
Ongoing treatment
Bradycardia is often caused by an underlying heart
condition that has damaged the heart's electrical system. People older than 65
are most likely to develop one of several different types of bradycardia that
usually require a permanent
pacemaker.
If heart medicines such as
beta-blockers,
calcium channel blockers,
antiarrhythmics, or
digoxin are causing bradycardia, your doctor most
likely will try first to adjust or change medicines. But many times the
medicines cannot be stopped or adjusted, because they are needed to treat other
heart conditions. In these cases, you may have a permanent pacemaker implanted
so that you can continue to take critical medicines.
Treatment if the condition gets worse
Typically, pacemakers improve symptoms and may prolong life in
people with
bradycardia. But further treatment depends on the
underlying cause of bradycardia. Many people have other underlying heart
conditions, such as
coronary artery disease, that require additional
treatment.
If you have episodes of a slow heart rate alternating with a
rapid, irregular heart rate (atrial fibrillation), you may have a
higher risk for a
stroke. With atrial fibrillation, erratic electrical
impulses cause the upper chambers of the heart (atria) to quiver, or
fibrillate. Because the atria do not pump effectively, blood pools there and
can clot, significantly increasing the risk of stroke and death from stroke. A
stroke can happen when the clot travels from the heart and blocks blood flow to
the brain.
A pacemaker is usually used along with
anticoagulant medicines, which reduce the risk of
clotting and stroke. You may need other medicines to prevent a fast heart rate
or to slow your heart rate during these episodes. The pacemaker does not treat
the fast heart rhythm. But it may allow you to safely take medicines that can
treat the fast rhythm.