Cardiolabel Nederlands op Facebook VZW Hartziekte op twitter

 

 

Pacemaker

Although it weighs just about an ounce, a pacemaker contains a powerful battery, electronic circuits and computer memory that together generate electronic signals. The signals, or pacing pulses, are carried along thin, insulated wires, or leads, to the heart muscle. The signals cause the heart muscle to begin the contractions that cause a heartbeat.

 

 

Although it weighs just about an ounce, a pacemaker contains a powerful battery, electronic circuits and computer memory that together generate electronic signals.

 

Please link to our private, nonprofit organization's Web site? 

You can also assist our association by becoming a sponsoring member of our non-profit association "Cardiolabel". Minimum amount 1 USD ( Bank transfer fees ). More information klik on support us

 

 

 

Our Heart

 

 

Although it weighs just about an ounce, a pacemaker contains a powerful battery, electronic circuits and computer memory that together generate electronic signals.

 

CONTACT

How Will a Pacemaker Affect my Lifestyle?

Once you have a pacemaker, you have to avoid close or prolonged contact with electrical devices or devices that have strong magnetic fields. Devices that can interfere with a pacemaker include:

 

  • Cell phones and MP3 players (for example, iPods)

  • Household appliances, such as microwave ovens

  • High-tension wires

  • Metal detectors

  • Industrial welders

  • Electrical generators

 

These devices can disrupt the electrical signaling of your pacemaker and stop it from working properly. You may not be able to tell whether your pacemaker has been affected.

 

How likely a device is to disrupt your pacemaker depends on how long you're exposed to it and how close it is to your pacemaker.

 

To be on the safe side, some experts recommend not putting your cell phone or MP3 player in a shirt pocket over your pacemaker.

 

You may want to hold your cell phone up to the ear that's opposite the site where your pacemaker was implanted. If you strap your MP3 player to your arm while listening to it, put it on the arm that's farther from your pacemaker.

 

You can still use household appliances, but avoid close and prolonged exposure, as it may interfere with your pacemaker.

 

You can walk through security system metal detectors at your normal pace. You also can be checked with a metal detector wand as long as it isn't held for too long over your pacemaker site. You should avoid sitting or standing close to a security system metal detector. Notify airport screeners if you have a pacemaker.

 

Stay at least 2 feet away from industrial welders or electrical generators.

 

Some medical procedures can disrupt your pacemaker. These procedures include:

 

  • Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI

  • Shock-wave lithotripsy to get rid of kidney stones

  • Electrocauterization to stop bleeding during surgery

 

 

Let all of your doctors, dentists, and medical technicians know that you have a pacemaker. Your doctor can give you a card that states what kind of pacemaker you have. Carry this card in your wallet. You may want to consider wearing a medical ID bracelet or necklace that states that you have a pacemaker.

 

These devices can disrupt the electrical signaling of your pacemaker and stop it from working properly. You may not be able to tell whether your pacemaker has been affected. How likely a device is to disrupt your pacemaker depends on how long you're exposed to it and how close it is to your pacemaker.

 

To be on the safe side, some experts recommend not putting your cell phone or iPod in a shirt pocket over your pacemaker. You may want to hold the cell phone up to the ear that’s opposite the site where your pacemaker was implanted. If you strap your iPod to your arm while listening to it, put it on the arm farthest from your pacemaker.

 

You can still use household appliances, but avoid close and prolonged exposure, as it may interfere with your pacemaker.

 

You can walk through security system metal detectors at your normal pace. You also can be checked with a metal detector wand as long as it isn't held for too long over your pacemaker site.

 

You should avoid sitting or standing close to a security system metal detector.

 

Stay at least 2 feet away from industrial welders or electrical generators.

 

Let all of your doctors, dentists, and medical technicians know that you have a pacemaker. You also should notify airport screeners. Your doctor can give you a card that states what kind of pacemaker you have. Carry this card in your wallet.

 

Physical Activity

In most cases, having a pacemaker won't limit you from doing sports and exercise, including strenuous activities. You may need to avoid full-contact sports, such as football. Such contact could damage your pacemaker or shake loose the wires in your heart. Ask your doctor how much and what kinds of physical activity are safe for you.

 

Followup

Your doctor will want to check your pacemaker regularly. Over time, a pacemaker can stop working properly because:

 

  • • Its wires get dislodged or broken

 

  • • Its battery fails

 

  • • Your heart disease progresses

 

  • • Devices giving off strong electrical, magnetic, or radio waves have disrupted its electrical signaling

 

To check your pacemaker, your doctor may ask you to come in for an office visit several times a year. Some pacemaker functions can be checked remotely through a telephone call or a computer connection to the Internet. Your doctor also may ask you to have an EKG to monitor changes in the electrical activity of your heart.

 

Battery Replacement

Pacemaker batteries last between 5 and 15 years, depending on how active the pacemaker is. Your doctor will replace the generator along with the battery before the battery begins to run down.

 

Replacement of the generator/battery is a less involved surgery than the original surgery to implant the pacemaker. The wires of your pacemaker also may need to be replaced eventually. Your doctor can tell you whether you need to replace your pacemaker or its wires.

"Thanks for supporting the fight against heart disease"