Re: Right bundle branch block
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Posted by CCF MD-EB on August 22, 1997 at 13:15:28:
In Reply to: Right bundle branch block posted by Gerry howe on August 19, 1997 at 23:16:42:
: I suffered a mild heart attack on an airplane last week.
Fortunately a physician on the plane was able to assist me.
The
ECGEcg
Electrocardiogram (ecg)
Exercise stress test
Post myocardial infarction ecg wave tracings at the hospital indicated I had a right bundle branch block.
Checking with my
familyBirth control and family planning
Choosing a primary care provider
Ewing’s sarcoma
Family troubles - resources doctor this also appeared in an
ECGEcg
Electrocardiogram (ecg)
Exercise stress test
Post myocardial infarction ecg wave tracings taken
12 months earlier.
What is a RBBB and would it contribute to my attack?
The heart is composed of two systems: the circulatory system and the conduction system or in
layman’s terms "plumbing and electricity." The circulatory system is composed of the coronary
arteries which supply blood flow to the heart muscle itself. The conduction system is composed of
three fascicles- the left bundle which has two divisions and the right bundle which has one
division. A person can have a problem with the conduction system and no problem with the
circulatory system and vice versa. A right bundle branch block implies that one of three fascicles
has slower conduction and this produces a characteristic pattern on the
electrocardiogramEcg
Electrocardiogram (ecg). In
patients who are suffering heart attacks it is not uncommon to see conduction disturbances during
the event. Since the right bundle branch block was present before this recent event it is unlikely
this contributed to your "heart attack."