Pacemaker Insertion
& Care
Cardiologists use pacemakers to control
the speed at which the heart pumps in patients prone to abnormally
slow heart rates. Modern pacemakers are about two-thirds the size
of the average cellular phone and contain a battery, a timing mechanism
and wires, which electrically stimulate the heart muscle to contract.
Our cardiologists place very sophisticated pacemakers quickly under
intravenous sedation. The cardiologist will access the heart through
the vein under the collar bone (subclavian vein). The cardiologist
than threads two wires through the vein and places them in the appropriate
position and than implants the timing mechanism and battery just
underneath the skin near the shoulder.
After having a pacemaker placed, patients return to our office
on a periodic basis to have the battery and timing mechanisms checked.
If your battery needs to be changed or your pacemaker does not function
properly, we can detect it before a serious problem develops.
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