Is AFib hard to diagnose?

Atrial Fibrillation is also notoriously difficult to detect . It is an irregular and often rapid heart rate that can lead to heart-related complications like stroke and heart failure. Knowing the signs, symptoms, and treatment of AFib could assist in early detection and possibly save your life.

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How is atrial flutter diagnosed on ECG?

Atrial flutter is diagnosed by you medical history, history of symptoms, and a physical exam. Electrocardiography (ECG or EKG) frequently makes the diagnosis by showing saw tooth flutter waves in several (II, III, aVF and/or V1) of the 12 ECG leads recorded , indicating atrial tachycardia of about 250 – 350 bpm.

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How is atrial flutter diagnosed?

An EKG is the most important test used in the diagnosis of AFib and atrial flutter . An EKG is performed by placing small, painless electrodes on your chest, wrist, and ankles. This test is performed while you are at rest or, in the case of an exercise stress test, while you are walking on a treadmill.

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