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Holter monitors are used to determine if you are having any rhythm
disturbances (irregular heartbeats) or to monitor your heart when
your medications have been changed. It is prescribed when you have
such symptoms as dizziness, palpitations, shortness of breath, fainting
spells, or chest pain. Heartbeats that are too fast or too slow
may cause light-headedness or fainting. Many times these symptoms
occur too infrequently to be detected by an EKG. The Holter monitor
is a continuous EKG recording for 24 hours which is likely to record
your rhythm disturbance. EKG leads are attached to your chest and
connected to your portable monitor which is worn on a strap or belt.
You will be given a diary to record your symptoms and activities
so they may be correlated with any abnormalities in your EKG.
Event Recorders In the event your Holter
monitor did not capture your rhythm disturbance, there are monitors
that have been developed to wear for 2 to 4 weeks at a time in order
to catch symptoms which are fleeting in nature. Using a new technology
called loop recording, the patient can record events that have just
passed, by pressing the record button. Since the recorder is constantly
recording, when you press the record button it stores the last 30
seconds of EKG as well as the next 30 seconds. So even if you press
the button after the symptom passes, you can still be recorded.

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Edward Rachofsky M.D., Ph.D
Specialties:
Consultative\Clinical Cardiovascular Medicine
Interventional Cardiolgy
Peripheral Arterial Intervention
Echocardiography
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