+1-617-394-8820 contact@baybiosciences.com

Heart Palpitations Overview

With heart palpitations, a person may notice that their heartbeat does not feel right. Many factors can trigger these heart flutters and in some cases, they can also indicate an underlying heart problem.

People are not usually aware of their heartbeat, but sometimes, it comes to their notice. This may be because their heart is pounding too hard, too fast, too slow, or irregularly.

Common Causes of Palpitations

Many factors can trigger heart palpitations. Some causes include physical or mental anxiety, dehydration stress, and lack of sleep.

However, they can also indicate an underlying heart problem.

Heart Conditions

The British Heart Foundation notes that palpitations can stem from a wide range of underlying heart conditions, such as:

  • Cardiomyopathy, wherein the heart becomes enlarged
  • Heart valve problems
  • Cogenital heart disease

Palpitations can also result from arrhythmia, which refers to any change to a person’s regular heartbeat.

Causes of arrhythmia include:

  • Atrial flutter, which is a fast and irregular heartbeat
  • Supra ventricular tachycardia, which is when the heart suddenly beats a lot faster than normal
  • Atrial fibrillation, which is when there is a short circuit in the heart that causes the atria, or upper chambers in the heart, to pump rapidly
  • Ventricular tachycardia, which occurs when the lower chambers of the heart pump too fast, reducing the amount of oxygen in the blood

It may also be a warning sign of heart failure or a heart attack, both of which can result from a range of structural and other issues.

Emotional Factors

Strong emotions can cause heart palpitations.

Emotional factors that can trigger heart palpitations include:

Heart palpitations most commonly occur due to anxiety-related causes.

Medication

Certain medications can also trigger heart palpitations.

According to the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS), the following medicines may trigger palpitations:

Medication for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, such as Adderall, may also cause heart palpitations.

Medical Conditions

Certain underlying medical conditions may be the cause of heart palpitations. These include:

  • An overactive or underactive thyroid 
  • Low blood sugar levels
  • High or low potassium levels
  • Levels of magnesium that are too low or high
  • Phelochromocytenia, which is a type of neuroendocrine tumor

Other medical conditions include the following:

  • Anemia
  • Dehydration
  • Diabetes 
  • Postural hypotension, which is when a person experiences dizziness and low blood pressure when standing up
  • A high fever
  • Sleep apnea

Lifestyle

Lifestyle factors that may cause heart palpitations include:

  • Alcohol consumption,
  • Caffeine including tea, coffee, or energy drinks
  • Tobacco smoking
  • Strenuous exercise
  • Rich or spicy food consumption
  • using recreational drugs, such as cannabis, cocaine,, heroin, ecstasy, or amphetamines

Hormonal changes

Hormonal changes are another possible cause. Changes in hormone levels may result from:

Are Palpitations Normal?

2021 article states that heart palpitations are very common and typically harmless.

In many cases, palpitations can be scary but not serious. However, they can be a symptom of arrhythmia and may also be a warning sign of cardiac arrest.

For this reason, it is a good idea for people who experience heart palpitations to seek medical advice.

Signs and Symptoms of Palpitations

Individuals experience heart palpitations in different ways.

The NHS notes that some common descriptions include the heart:

  • Beating harder, faster, or irregularly
  • Fluttering
  • Pounding

A person may feel a heart palpitation in the neck, throat, or chest. They may also feel them in their ear if they are lying down.

For some people, palpitations last for only a few seconds, while others may experience them for minutes or hours at a time.


Diagnosis of Palpitations

A doctor will likely:

  • Ask about symptoms
  • Carry out a physical exam
  • do a test using a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG)
  • Look at the individual’s medical history

An ECG measures heart rate and rhythm parameters through electrical tracing.

Depending on the symptoms, the doctor may also do blood tests, an exercise stress test, and other investigations, such as asking the person to wear an arrhythmia monitor at home.

They may also refer the person to a cardiologist.

People may find it useful to keep a diary noting the following information:

  • What their palpitations feel like
  • How often they happen
  • When they happen
  • What the triggers are
  • Whether they last for seconds, minutes, or hours

Being able to answer some of the following questions may also help with diagnosis:

  • Is the heart rate too fast or slow during a palpitation episode, and is the rhythm regular or irregular?
  • Do the palpitations start and stop suddenly or fade in and out?
  • Is there lightheadedness, dizziness, shortness of breath, or chest pain?
  • Do the palpitations tend to occur during a particular activity? Is there a pattern?


Treatment of Palpitations

Not everyone with heart palpitations will need treatment. If they do, it will depend on the type of palpitations, the person’s symptoms, and the cause and amount of palpitations they are experiencing. Options include:

  • Emotional causes: A person may find it beneficial to learn how to deal with a panic attacks and use breathing techniques to help remain calm.
  • Medication: If a person starts to have palpitations while taking certain medications, a doctor may recommend an alternative.
  • Lifestyle: The heart palpitations should resolve without treatment, and people may find it beneficial to avoid the triggers.
  • Hormonal: Heart palpitations that occur due to hormonal changes are usually temporary.

The doctor may prescribe antiarrhythmic drugs, such as beta blockers or non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker therapy. Beta-blockers slow the heart rate and reduce blood pressure.

If a person has arrhythmia, a healthcare professional may recommend the following medical procedures:

  • Catheter ablation surgery: During catheter ablation surgery, a cardiologist will thread an ablation device into the heart through a catheter that passes through a deep vein in the groin, neck, or chest. The device causes scars to form over faulty electrical tracts in the heart. This can help correct the way electrical impulses travel through the heart.
  • Electrical cardioversion: This procedure involves sending an electrical shock into the chest wall to try to stabilize a person’s heart rhythm and rate. A doctor may choose this therapy to “reset” the electrical rhythm of the heart.
  • Implantable pacemaker or defibrillator placement: A pacemaker is a permanent cardiac device that monitors and treats electrical conditions of the heart.

Home Remedies

Some people experience regular palpitations, which may be bothersome. To reduce these, a person can try the following:

  • Find a comfortable position and relax.
  • Perform deep breathing techniques.
  • Try to avoid panic, as this can worsen symptoms.
  • Take magnesium supplementation, although a person should discuss this with a doctor first.
  • Stay hydrated.

People may also try the Valsalva maneuver breathing method. A 2015 study found that the Valsalva maneuver is a simple and noninvasive method for stopping an abnormal heart rhythm. However, the researchers also noted that more research is necessary.

Complications

Many cases of heart palpitations are harmless. However, if they are a sign of an underlying heart condition, there can be serious complications.

Some heart conditions, such as atrial flutter, can lead to stroke.

Heart palpitations can also be a symptom of heart failure and may precede cardiac arrest.

Some people may faint due to a sudden drop in blood pressure. Always get palpitations checked out and discuss management with a healthcare professional.

Prevention of Palpitations

Often, lifestyle strategies can help reduce or stop nonserious palpitations. For example, people should try to reduce or avoid the following:

  • Alcohol
  • Caffeine
  • getting regular exercise
  • Tobacco
  • Any medications that may trigger palpitations

Other tips include:

  • Following a healthy diet
  • Getting enough sleep
  • Doing yoga, meditation, breathing exercises, or tai chi to help manage stress
  • avoiding known triggers or learning new ways to approach them 

These measures may also help reduce the risk of heart disease.

When to Contact a Doctor?

Heart palpitations usually pass quickly and are not serious, but it is a good idea to speak with a doctor if they occur.

If a person of any age experiences heart palpitations, they should contact a doctor. In addition, anyone with the following should contact a doctor if palpitations occur:

  • A history of heart problems
  • Palpitations that worsen or do not improve
  • Other symptoms, such as chest pain
  • Various health concerns


Summary

Many people experience heart palpitations from time to time. They can be non-severe, and some people will not need treatment. However, they can also indicate an underlying health condition.

For this reason, people should seek help if the palpitations occur unexpectedly or often, if they have an existing heart condition, or if they have other symptoms.

Bay Biosciences is a global leader in providing researchers with high quality, clinical grade, fully characterized human tissue samples, bio-specimens, and human bio-fluid collections.

Samples available include cancer (tumor) tissue, cancer serum, cancer plasma, cancer, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). and human tissue samples from most other therapeutic areas and diseases.

Bay Biosciences maintains and manages its own biorepository, the human tissue bank (biobank) consisting of thousands of diseased samples (specimens) and from normal healthy donors available in all formats and types.

Our biobank procures and stores fully consented, deidentified and institutional review boards (IRB) approved human tissue samples and matched controls.

All our human tissue collections, human specimens and human bio-fluids are provided with detailed, samples associated patient’s clinical data.

This critical patient’s clinical data includes information relating to their past and current disease, treatment history, lifestyle choices, biomarkers, and genetic information.

Patient’s data is extremely valuable for researchers and is used to help identify new effective treatments (drug discovery & development) in oncology, and other therapeutic areas and diseases.

Bay Biosciences banks wide variety of human tissue samples and biological samples, including cryogenically preserved at – 80°C.

Including fresh frozen tissue samplestumor tissue samples, formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE), tissue slides, with matching human bio-fluids, whole blood and blood-derived products such as serumplasma and PBMC.

Bay Biosciences is a global leader in collecting and providing human tissue samples according to the specified requirements and customized, tailor-made collection protocols.

Please contact us anytime to discuss your special research projects and customized human tissue sample requirements.

Types of Biospecimens

Bay Biosciences provides human tissue samples (human specimens) from diseased and normal healthy donors which includes:

We can also procure most human bio-specimens, special collections and requests for human samples that are difficult to find. All our human tissue samples are procured through IRB-approved clinical protocols and procedures.

In addition to the standard processing protocols, Bay Biosciences can also provide human plasmaserum, and PBMC bio-fluid samples using custom processing protocols; you buy donor-specific collections in higher volumes and specified sample aliquots from us.

Bay Biosciences also provides human samples from normal healthy donors; volunteers, for controls and clinical research, contact us Now.

  • 日本のお客様は、ベイバイオサイエンスジャパンBay Biosciences Japanまたはhttp://baybiosciences-jp.com/contact/までご連絡ください。