Common rapid heart disorders, clinical performance, common causes and their treatment

The following is a detailed description of rapid heart disorder, a type of heart disorder characterized by rapid heart rate growth:The definition of rapid heart disorder refers to an abnormality in the heart, a heart rate exceeding normal range, a normal heart rate of 60-100 per cent, and a rapid heart disorder, often greater than 100 per cent per cent, which can be caused by a variety of causes, including many different types of heart disorder.Categorization and common type .Spacing cardiac disorders:• Cardiac hyperactivity: this is one of the most common and relatively benign types, caused by the increase in the frequency of the impulses for the distribution of gills, usually stimulated by physical or pathological factors such as emotional agitation, intense motion, fever, anaemia, thyroid hyperactivity, etc., so that the post-factor heart rate is more likely to return to normal on its own.• Sexual excesses on the pyrophoric room: most of them are caused by a reversion mechanism, and the common ones, such as a double-route return of the room and the participation of the sidewalk of the pre-motivation syndrome, have abrupt and abrupt features that can clearly sense panic, heart breakdown, a period free of all symptoms and daily life.• Cardiac tremors: the heart room loses its effective constrictive function and replaces it with a fast and disorderly tremor wave, with a very irregular heart rate, which can give rise to symptoms such as panic, heart palpitation, chest stifling, shortness, etc., and can lead to the formation of a heart chamber embolism, with a high risk of embolism.• Cardiac impulses: The rapid and relative pretence of the heart room, the severity of which is between the sexual hyperactivity and the convulsion of the heart, also affects the blood pump function and causes associated symptoms.• Internal rapid heart disorder:• Over-motivation of the indoor heart: A rapid cardiac arrhythmia originating from a cardiac muscle below the hectic beam, with three or more consecutive indoor early paces, often associated with signs of panic, palpitation, dizziness, incapacitation, etc., which, in serious cases, can lead to fainting, and can even deteriorate into a fratrical tremors that endanger life.• Cardiac tremors: rapid, disorderly and uncoordinated tremors in the heart muscles, loss of effective blood pump function in the heart, immediate loss of consciousness, convulsions, stop breathing, etc. of the patient, if not rescued in time, death within minutes, is one of the most fatal heart disorders.• Cardiac impulses: between room speeds and room tremors, there is a rapid and relative pacing of the heart muscles, which also means that there is a severe impairment of the blood function of the heart pump, and that there will soon be a critical condition such as loss of consciousness, which, if not saved in time, will lead to death as a result of the tremor.Pathological:• Extremist physical activity: when high-intensity physical exercise takes place, there is a significant increase in the demand for physical metabolics, and in order to ensure that organs are supplied with sufficient blood and oxygen, the heart accelerates the beating, and the hysteria occurs, which is a normal physical reaction, usually returning to normal after the end of the exercise, with appropriate rest rates.• Emotional: When a person is in a state of intense emotional stress, anxiety, excitement, etc., the hormonal genre increases in the body, increases the excitement of the heart, increases the heart rate, and can cause a number of rapid cardiac disorders, such as hypercardial hyperactivity in the symmetry room, hypercardiology, etc., which tends to ease when the mood is calm.Drinking of alcohol, coffee or strong tea: The compositions contained in these drinks (e.g. alcohol, caffeine, etc.) can stimulate hysteria, the excitement of the heart, lead to an increase in the heart rate, and tend to induce cardiac disorders such as hypervelocity, hypercardia, etc., especially among those who overdrink or are themselves more sensitive to these substances, the symptoms may be more evident.• Pregnancy: During pregnancy, a series of physical changes occurred in the body, increasing blood capacity, increasing heart loads, and the heart rate is usually higher. Some pregnant women suffer from hysteria, which is more common in the later stages of pregnancy and can normally return to normal after childbirth.Reasons for illness:• Physical heart disease:• Coronary heart disease: Sclerosis of coronary porridge results in myocardial insemination, anaerobic insinuation, which affects the normal functioning of the heart-transmitting system and can cause various rapid heart disorders.Myocardiosis: expansionary myocardiosis, fat myocardiosis, etc.• Cardiac valve disease: corrosive disease, such as a narrow piping, arctic retrenchment, arctic retrenchment, can alter the hemodynamics of the heart, lead to an increase in the pressure or capacity load of the heart or the heart, and contribute to rapid cardiac disorders, such as a high incidence of tremors in a narrow piping.• Congenital heart disease: Infertile heart structure, such as loss of room spacing, loss of room spacing, failure to close artery catheters, etc., is abnormal and prone to rapid heart disorder, which is often present from an early age and changes as the condition evolves.• The adverse effects of medicines: Certain anti-cardiological disorders, yellow-like poisoning in the ocean, and excessive use of adrenaline-type drugs can lead to abnormal cardiac electrical activity, leading to various rapid cardiac disorders, so that the use of these drugs requires strict adherence to medical instructions and close monitoring of changes such as the EKG.Clinical performance: Panic, heart attack: This is the most common symptom of almost all fast-paced patients who feel their heart rate is accelerating, beating irregularly or beating very strongly, a feeling of panic that can upset, stress and affect daily life and work, especially when they are active or emotional.• Tired chests and short-temperatures: the durability of the activity is significantly reduced, and it may be difficult to breathe when carrying out light physical activity (e.g. climbing a stairwell, walking a small road) and need to stop and rest.• Dizziness, weakness: critical organs are not provided with sufficient blood, are prone to symptoms of dizziness, lack of strength and can even be blackened (at first sight), fainting, etc., when severe, especially when rapid heart failure lasts longer and heart rate faster.• Other symptoms: Some patients may also be accompanied by symptoms of autonomous nervous disorders such as sweat, nausea, vomiting, etc. There are also differences in symptoms, depending on factors such as the effect on the heart function and the combination of other diseases.Rest breaks, medicines, emergency consultations, etc. are generally handled.In general, heart disorders are common, with associated symptoms known, combined with underlying diseases and immediate state, and can be roughly assessed for heart disorders, which, if difficult to mitigate, require urgent medical attention.