Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Graduation thesis - What is the gold standard for diagnosing arrhythmia?
What is the gold standard for diagnosing arrhythmia?
Hello, there is no gold standard.

Heart rhythm is dynamic, and individual differences of each person are very complicated.

According to clinical identification, the heart rate is "normal" when it is within 60 beats per minute to 100, which has nothing to do with individual differences.

For example, a person whose heart rate is 66 beats per minute at rest has 90 clinical symptoms per minute at rest, which is not an indicator of health.

Another example is that a person's heart rate is about 90 times at ordinary times, and occasionally touching 108 times does not mean that there is something wrong.

As long as there are some symptoms of arrhythmia, it is arrhythmia, such as premature beats, arrhythmia, atrial fibrillation and so on. If you find it yourself, you should cure it in time on the principle of early detection and early treatment.

Generally speaking, if the early arrhythmia is caused by natural factors (such as excitement, excessive exercise, etc.) ), you can recover through the regulation function of your own physiological system.

In the treatment of advanced arrhythmia, no pharmaceutical product can completely control or cure the substantial therapeutic effect. This is because the physiological function of heart beating is biophysical and cannot be solved by biochemical products-it is not symptomatic. It's like a stutterer who wants to speak fluently, and a Ningbo native who wants to learn Mandarin ... must rely on training, but it's no use taking medicine to solve it.

At school, you still have to complete the exam or thesis according to the teaching materials and the relevant contents of teachers and professors. Once you work in the hospital, your clinical case summary is the main thing.

for reference only

Sun Ping