All paid DoctorBase customers will be migrated to Kareo Marketing on December 15, 2016. Read how to get your practice ready for the transition.
×

4 Reasons Why Ask DoctorBase is the Most Efficient Way to SEO and Establish Your Brand Online

  1. Ask DoctorBase is a free service for patients on the DoctorBase platform - currently servicing over 6 million American patients of record.
  2. All answers submitted by healthcare professionals (you) are for entertainment purposes only and do not constitute doctor-patient relationships. All patients must agree to this before using Ask DoctorBase.
  3. Our software and our Marketing Engineering staff review each answer and optimize your answers for keywords valuable to your specialty. It is a well kept secret that doctors (you) - not SEO consultants - are the ones who have the most valuable content prized by search engines. Ask DoctorBase "unlocks and optimizes" your content in the most efficient manner possible with today's technology.
  4. Finally, the doctor who provides the most popular answer - "the Featured Answer," gets an added benefit by allowing patients to write rave reviews about your expertise - reviews that are submitted to both Google and Google Local through our Preferred Data Provider relationship.

Ask Dr. Molly if you have questions or want a personal session on how to best use Ask DoctorBase for maximum marketing impact.

...

Molly Maloof, MD

Director of Clinical Content
@DoctorBase

Tachycardia

The Boy 17 years old diagnosed with abnormality Hart beets.Some name of this Tachycardia ,syndrome B.

What is it ,and how to take care ,what treatments to use?
Poster
  • Female | 60 years old
  • Medications: no
  • Conditions: Fatigue

Find low drug prices at local & online pharmacies

Find low drug prices at local & online pharmacies
It may be:

Brugada syndrome (type B)

or

Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome type B with tachycardia

Request EKG FOR further evaluation
Professor M Zak Khalil MD MRCPUK
There are different kinds of tachycardia or abnormal heart beats. The treatment for each one depends on the specific diagnoses. You need to see a cardiologist for definite diagnoses and treatment
Hanna Gebre Medhin
Dr Andrew Rudin hit the nail on the head!

See a cardiac electrophysiologist soon before a disaster occurs.

Prevention Works!
I agree with the comments before me. You need to see a clinical Cardiac Electrophysiologist. We are specialized cardiologists who take care of patients with problems in the electrical system of the heart. It sounds like the boy has WPW type B, which means he has an extra electrical pathway going from the top to the bottom chamber. Most people have one electrical pathway, people with WPW have two, so the electrical signals can go down one pathway and up the other real fast causing a type of short circuit or very fast heart beat. This is sometimes dangerous, especially in people who have palpitations or have fainted. Its best to get him checked out sooner than later.
Andrew Rudin
Tachycardia is a heart rate that exceeds the normal range, that being said there are many varieties and each can be associated with a variety of signs and symptoms. Most arrhythmia's can be treated with oral medications but some require invasive procedures by a electrophysiologist who specializes in conduction disorders, normally associated with a cardiology group.
Most probable Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome type B.

Must follow up with a cardiologist who specializes in electric control of the heart.
I agree that it is hard to tell what the problem is online. If he has a tachycardia that has a name and wasn't referred to a pediatric cardiologist, I would ask for a referral and the cardiologist can give you more information about what he has and how to treat it.
Thank you very much!
Poster
I'm not sure what you are referring to with "Syndrome B?" Perhaps this is TypeB WPW or Wolff-Parkinson White Syndrome. There is also a Type A WPW, too. If this is the case, go see a Cardiologist that specializes in Electrophysiology or specifically on the conduction System within the heart as there are semi-invasive procedures that can be done to address the problem with the tachycardia
Alvin K. Eng