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Electrocardiogram (EKG)
What is Electrocardiogram?
The electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) is a diagnostic tool that measures and records the electrical activity of the heart in exquisite detail. Interpretation of these details allows diagnosis of a wide range of heart conditions. These conditions can vary from minor to life threatening.
What You Can Expect During an EKG
Few procedures in medicine are easier than an EKG.
- You will lie down quietly on a bed or stretcher.
- A technician (or sometimes a nurse, doctor, or other medical professional) will place 6 small adhesive electrode pads across your chest from your lower breast bone (sternum) to an area below your left armpit. Other pads will be placed on each of your arms and legs. Insulated wires will connect each of these 10 pads to the EKG machine.
- Once these wires, called "leads," are attached, the EKG records a few heartbeats on a single sheet of graph paper.
Each heartbeat produces a set of P-QRS-T waves.
- This set of waves, in turn, is recorded and analyzed from each of 12 points of view.
- Six of these points of view are the locations of the 6 pads placed across your chest. These are called V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, and V6 (pronounced Vee One, Vee Two, and so on).
- The other points of view represent combinations of the pads placed on the arms and legs. These are called I, II, III , aVR, aVL, and aVF.
- The interpretation of the waves produced by each of these 12 views provides valuable information about the functioning of your heart.
In some circumstances, medical illnesses elsewhere in the body or various drugs (especially in overdose situations) affect an otherwise healthy heart in ways revealed by diagnostic or suggestive changes in to the EKG changes.In addition to the 12-lead EKG, an additional "rhythm strip" may be taken. This represents only one point of view but is a good way to see important changes that may be occurring over longer periods of time.
- These may be changes that are hard to interpret or are not even detected in the handful of heartbeats recorded in the standard 12-lead EKG.
- This is especially useful when the heart is beating slower or faster than normal.
Some people with heart rhythm disorders (arrhythmias) or coronary heart disease have symptoms that come and go.
- These symptoms may include brief chest pain or angina, palpitations, dizziness, or weakness.
- If you are not having symptoms when you see your health care provider, your EKG result may be perfectly normal.
- This is a common occurrence, and it is frustrating because your health care provider cannot properly diagnose or treat your problem until it has been documented on EKG.
If this happens to you, your health care provider will probably recommend ambulatory EKG.
- This is a good way to "catch" and document any temporary or intermittent abnormalities such as irregular heartbeats.
- For this test, you are attached to an EKG recording device (sometimes called a Holter monitor) that records every heartbeat for periods of 24 hours (or longer, if necessary). An alternative method is to record the heartbeats only intermittently but for a longer period of time, days or weeks.
- Long-term monitoring significantly increases your chances of "catching" any abnormalities on the EKG, even if they last only a few minutes or seconds.
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Royal Oak Clinic
4045 W.13 Mile Rd
Royal Oak, MI 48703
248-435-8066
Fax: 248-435-8099
Sterling Heights Clinic
13753 19 Mile Rd
Sterling Heights, MI 48313
586-566-8680
Fax: 586-566-8730
Dearborn Clinic
4700 Greenfield Rd
Dearborn, MI 48126
313-945-5939
Fax: 313-945-5932
Dearborn Roemer Clinic
4407 Roemer
Dearborn, MI 48126
313-584-0768
Fax: 313-945-9339
Administrative/Medical Records Office
30701 Woodward Avenue
Royal Oak, MI 48073
248-288-1600
Fax: 248-288-2171
Maps of Locations
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Please click the following link to view or print the Basha Diagnostics Appointment Forms
MRI/MRA specific Form
General appointment Form
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