ok that's a far cheaper and less informative method. If he cannot do more than the specified time on the treadmill, then an echo will be required.
his physician told him that he will have to take the treadmill stress test to know if his heart is really the problem.
thanks for the info :)
i cant acces that account anymore so this is my new account :)
Perhaps an echocardiogram would be a good next test
what is the best way to do for this kind of situation? is he really fine when sometimes he felt chest pain.
please explain to me what is the cause of his chest pain?
thanks for the info :)
what about his chest pain? what's cause of that chest pain?
Don't worry, you can live with an RBBB - at least I have for many years.
It means that the signal isn't getting to the right side of his heart in the normal fashion. The signal starts in the right atrium, gets delayed and then goes to the left/right ventricles. The signal going to the right ventricle is blocked so it has to take a slower route across the normal muscle. Sinus bradycardia means his heart rate is slower than average. So he doesn't have heart disease which is a good thing. He was probably born with the right bundle branch block or had a disease later in years.