Test Can Detect Who Needs An Implantable Defibrillator, Reports The Harvard Heart Letter

BOSTON, June 6 /PRNewswire/ -- A test that picks up a nearly undetectable variation in the heartbeat helps single out heart attack survivors who are likely to develop potentially deadly heart rhythms, reports the June issue of the Harvard Heart Letter. These are the people who would most benefit from getting a device called an implantable defibrillator, which shocks the heart back into a normal rhythm if it goes astray.

Defibrillators help some heart attack survivors who have damage to the left ventricle live longer. The problem is that doctors can't easily tell which survivors are most likely to suddenly develop lethal heart rhythms -- and so would benefit from a defibrillator -- and which aren't. The new test, called the T wave alternans test, may fill that need. Originally designed for the space program, the test detects beat-to-beat changes in the heartbeat that are too small to be seen on a standard electrocardiogram (EKG).

Medicare recently announced it would pay for the T wave tests for people "at risk of sudden cardiac death." Right now that mostly means heart attack survivors with damage to the left ventricle. Researchers estimate that use of the test to choose the best candidates for implanted defibrillators could save Medicare more than $600 million a year. But it may also be used for other people at high risk of a sudden cardiac arrest.

Also in this issue: * Plavix is not for everyone * Machine may ease fluid overload during heart failure * Two new cholesterol tests to predict heart attack * B vitamins don't fix heart disease * Pacemakers and mammograms * Prayer and healing * Achilles tendon pain and high cholesterol * Exercise and cardiac arrest in women * A doctor answers: What to do about mini-strokes (TIAs)?

The Harvard Heart Letter is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of Harvard Medical School, for $28 per year. Subscribe at http://www.health.harvard.edu/heart or by calling 1-877-649-9457 (toll free).

Harvard Heart Letter

CONTACT: Contact: Christine Junge of Harvard Health Publications, +1-617-432-4717, Christine_Junge@hms.harvard.edu

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