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Bradycardia

photo of heart lights with one heart in foreground

Outside The Norm

A normal heart rate somewhere between 60 to 100 beats per minute. If your heart rate is only 44 beats per minute then you probably have bradycardia, the term for a heart rate slower than about 60 beats per minute.

But bradycardia doesn't necessarily mean you're not in perfectly good health. In well-conditioned athletes, bradycardia is a result of being in such good shape that the heart beats more efficiently, and so it doesn't need to beat as quickly. An athlete may have a heart rate as slow as 30 and not show any signs of problems. Also, deep relaxation, such as sleep, slows the heart down.

When There's A Problem

Bradycardia can also be caused by certain medications, by other disorders such as hyperthyroidism, and by dysfunction of the sinus node. I don't mean the hollow space behind your nose, but the node inside your heart. The sinus node powers your heart by electrical impulses. Dysfunction of the sinus node, then, can cause the heart to beat too slowly to keep up with your body's need for blood.

Lightheadedness, weakness and fainting are symptoms that a heart may be beating too slowly. In such cases, doctors will remove problem medications, correct the underlying disorder, or insert a pacemaker that fills in for the sinus node. If symptomatic bradycardia goes untreated, it could lead to death, but that's easy enough to prevent--just go see your doctor.

Read More:

"Bradycardia" (Cardiology Explained And Presented By Robert Matthews, M.D.)

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