Event Monitoring
What is Event Monitoring?
Event monitoring is a method of recording the heart rhythm
during symptoms, or an “event.”
If you’ve been having recurrent symptoms, such as
palpitations, dizziness, or fainting spells, your doctor may want to determine
whether these symptoms are caused by an arrhythmia, an abnormal heart
rhythm in which the heart may beat too rapidly, too slowly or irregularly.
Doctors can diagnose an arrhythmia by obtaining an electrocardiogram,
or ECG, a recording of the heart’s electrical activity. However,
an ECG records activity for a brief period (less than a minute). If your
doctor suspects you have an arrhythmia, he or she will want to record
the ECG over longer periods of time and will order an event monitor.
You will carry a recorder, about the size of a pager, over
a period of 30 days while attending usual daily activities. Worn day and
night, the recorder continuously scans your heart’s electrical activity.
When you experience symptoms, you will press a button and the device records
and stores up to several minutes of the heart’s electrical activity
before, during and after an event. At your convenience, you can transmit
the stored data over the telephone to your doctor’s office or to
an ECG receiving center.
You will keep a diary during the period you carry the recorder.
The information you’ll need to enter in the diary includes the date
and time of each entry, symptoms you experience and what you were doing
at the time of the event. The diary enables nurses and doctors to correlate
your symptoms with the ECG recordings.
Once the data have been transmitted, a nurse or doctor will
analyze and interpret the recording. The information gained from the test
helps your doctor make an accurate diagnosis and develop a treatment plan
that’s best for you.
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