Palpitation is an uncomfortable feeling of heartbeat as a quickening, stopping, or strong beat. It is often felt in the chest area, but rarely in the neck and throat. Exercise, psychological stress, fatigue, medications, and sometimes illness can initiate palpitations. Diseases that cause palpitations include anemia, toxic goiter, heart valve diseases, heart failure and heart rhythm disorders. Further investigations and investigations are recommended if patients have symptoms of chest pain, significant shortness of breath, dizziness, or palpitation accompanied by fainting, which is very common and lasts for a long time.
Heart palpitations can also be a symptom of different diseases of other organs, such as the heart and thyroid gland. Sinus tachycardia is a disorder characterized by the heart beating more than 100 beats per minute. It usually occurs gradually. Premature ventricular contraction produces a false sense of beat in the form of a heart ricochet. This is because when the heart ventricles contract prematurely after the previous contraction, there is a long compensatory pause before a second contraction. Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation is a rapid, irregular flutter that occurs due to temporary arrhythmia in the atria.
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