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(with links to coverage lists) Are you at Risk for Sudden Cardiac
Arrest?
Are you at Risk for Sudden Cardiac
Arrest?
Years after heart bypass surgery, Jim Miller was symptom free. Several
measures of his heart’s functioning did not show that he was in danger of
sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). But Miller’s doctor decided to make sure
and the quick, non-invasive test he performed may have saved Miller’s life.
The test, called
Microvolt T-Wave Alternans (MTWA), measures a tiny heart beat
irregularity believed to cause SCA. It is administered much like a stress
test, on a treadmill. Specialized sensors are applied to a patient’s skin
and within minutes, a readout shows the doctor if more testing or preventive
measures are required. In
Miller’s case, the test showed the irregularity, indicating elevated risk
for SCA.. Miller’s cardiologist, Steven
Korotkin, MD, of Bingham Farms, Michigan, ordered further testing, surgical
implantation of a defibrillator to administer an electric shock to restart
Miller’s heart, should it stop beating.
Prediction and prevention are critically important when it comes to SCA, an
event that occurs without warning. Redundant! According to the American
Heart Association, 95 percent of cardiac arrest victims in the US die before
reaching the hospital, resulting in nearly 300,000 deaths each year.And,
according to Theodore Chow, MD, an electrophysiologist in St. Jose, CA, 50
percent of patients with some form of heart disease will die from SCAif not
diagnosed and treated.”
Chow believesthat as in Miller’s case, many of those deaths can be
prevented. That is why, this month, he is opening what may bethe nation’s
first clinic to focus on preventing SCA.
Located in San Jose, the new Silicon Valley Institute for Cardiac Arrest
Prevention offers several tests, including MTWA, that can determine whether
patients are at risk of sudden death.
“These testsare very helpful in determining which patients are at risk for
SCA and they can, potentially, save many lives,” said Chow, who has written
manymedical journal articles and lled national studies on SCA prevention
tools.
“For example.five minutes after a patient starts walking on the treadmill,
the MTWA test shows whether more invasive testing or preventive measures may
be needed,” Chow said.” Equally important, if the MTWA level is normal, the
test shows that patients can safely exercise and carry out daily activities
without worry.”
MTWA testing, developed and distributed by
Cambridge Heart, in Tewksbury, MA, is reimbursable by Medicare and many
private insurers. It is used in doctors’ offices and hospitals nationwide.
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