PALPITATIONS

ESSENTIAL INQUIRIES

Forceful, rapid, or irregular beating of the heart.
Rate, duration, and degree of regularity of heart beat.
Age at first episode.
Factors that precipitate or terminate episodes.
Light-headedness or syncope.
Neck pounding.
Chest pain.

General Considerations

Palpitations are defined as an unpleasant awareness of the forceful, rapid, or irregular beating of the heart. They are a common presenting complaint and are usually benign; however, they are occasionally the symptom of a life-threatening arrhythmia. To avoid missing a dangerous cause of the patient’s symptom, clinicians sometimes pursue expensive and invasive testing when a conservative diagnostic evaluation is sufficient. The converse is also true; in one study, 54% of patients with supraventricular tachycardia were initially wrongly diagnosed with panic, stress, or anxiety disorder. A disproportionate number of these misdiagnosed patients are women.

Clinical Findings

A. Symptoms

Although described by patients in a myriad of ways, guiding the patient through a careful description of their palpitations may indicate a mechanism and narrow the differential diagnosis. Pertinent questions include the age at first episode; precipitants; and the rate, duration, and degree of regularity of the heart beat during the subjective palpitations. The examiner can ask the patient to “tap out” the rhythm with their fingers. The circumstances associated with onset and termination can also be helpful in determining the cause. Palpitations that start and stop abruptly suggest supraventricular or ventricular tachycardias. Patient-terminated palpitations using vagal maneuvers (such as the Valsalva maneuver) suggests supraventricular tachycardia.

Three common descriptions of palpitations are (1) “flip-flopping” (or “stop and start”), often caused by premature contraction of the atrium or ventricle, with the perceived “stop” from the pause following the contraction, and the “start” from the subsequent forceful contraction; (2) rapid “fluttering in the chest,” with regular “fluttering” suggesting supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmias (including sinus tachycardia) and irregular “fluttering” suggesting atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, or tachycardia with variable block; and (3) “pounding in the neck” or neck pulsations, often due to “cannon” A waves in the jugular venous pulsations that occur when the right atrium contracts against a closed tricuspid valve.

Palpitations associated with chest pain suggests ischemic heart disease, or if the chest pain is relieved by leaning forward, pericardial disease is suspected. Palpitations associated with light-headedness, presyncope, or syncope suggests hypotension and may signify a life-threatening cardiac arrhythmia. Palpitations that occur regularly with exertion suggests a rate-dependent bypass tract or hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy. If a benign etiology for these concerning symptoms cannot be ascertained at the index visit, then ambulatory monitoring or prolonged cardiac monitoring in the hospital might be warranted.

Noncardiac symptoms should also be elicited since the palpitations may be caused by a normal heart responding to a metabolic or inflammatory condition. Weight loss may suggest hyperthyroidism. Palpitations can be precipitated by vomiting or diarrhea that leads to electrolyte disorders and hypovolemia. Palpitations associated with hyperventilation, hand tingling, and nervousness are  common when anxiety or panic disorder is the root cause.

B. Physical Examination

It is uncommon for the clinician to have the opportunity to examine a patient during an episode of palpitations.

However, careful cardiovascular examination can find abnormalities that can increase the likelihood of specific cardiac arrhythmias. The midsystolic click of mitral valve prolapse can suggest the diagnosis of a supraventricular arrhythmia as the cause for the palpitations. The harsh holosystolic murmur of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, which occurs along the left sternal border and increases with the Valsalva maneuver, suggests atrial fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia. The presence of dilated cardiomyopathy, suggested on examination by a displaced and enlarged cardiac point-of-maximal impulse, increases the likelihood of ventricular tachycardia and atrial fibrillation. In patients with chronic atrial fibrillation, in-office exercise (eg, a brisk walk in the hallway) may reveal an intermittent accelerated ventricular response as the cause of the palpitations. The clinician should also look for signs of hyperthyroidism, such as tremulousness, brisk deep tendon reflexes, fine hand tremor, or signs of stimulant drug use (such as dilated pupils or skin or nasal septal lesions). The presence of visible neck pulsations (LR, 2.68; 95% CI, 1.25–5.78) inassociation with palpitations increases the likelihood of  atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia.

C. Diagnostic Studies

The two cardiac studies that are commonly used in the initial evaluation of a patient with palpitations are the 12-lead ECG and ambulatory monitoring devices, such as the Holter monitor or the event recorder.

A 12-lead ECG should be performed on all patients reporting palpitations because it can provide evidence for a wide variety of causes. Although in most instances a specific arrhythmia will not be detected on the tracing, a careful evaluation of the ECG can help the clinician deduce a likely etiology in certain circumstances.

For instance, bradyarrhythmias and heart block can be associated with ventricular ectopy or escape beats that may be experienced as palpitations by the patient. Evidence of prior myocardial infarction by history or on ECG (eg, Q waves) increases the patient’s risk for nonsustained or sustained ventricular tachycardia. Ventricular preexcitation (Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome) is suggested by a short PR interval (< 0.20 ms) and delta waves (upsloping PR segments). Left ventricular hypertrophy with deep septal Q waves in I, VL, and V4 through V6 is seen in patients with  hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. The presence of left atrial enlargement as suggested by a terminal p-wave force in V1 more negative than 0.04 msec and notched in lead II reflects a patient at increased risk for atrial fibrillation. A prolonged QT interval and abnormal T-wave morphology suggests the long-QT syndrome, which puts patients at increased risk for ventricular tachycardia.

For high-risk patients (Table 2–5), further diagnostic studies are warranted. A step-wise approach has been suggested—starting with ambulatory monitoring devices (Holter monitoring if the palpitations are expected tooccur within the subsequent 72-hour period, event monitoring if less frequent), followed by invasive electrophysiologic testing if the ambulatory monitor records a worrisome arrhythmia or if serious arrhythmias are strongly suspected despite normal findings on an appropriate ambulatory monitor.

In patients with a prior myocardial infarction, ambulatorycardiac monitoring or signal-averaged-ECG are appropriate next steps to assess ventricular tachycardia. ECG exercise testing is appropriate in patients who have palpitations with physical exertion and patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Echocardiography is useful when physical examination or ECG suggests structural abnormalities or decreased ventricular function.

Differential Diagnosis

When assessing a patient with palpitations in an urgent care setting, the clinician must ascertain whether the symptoms represent (1) an arrhythmia that is minor and transient, (2) significant cardiovascular disease, (3) a cardiac manifestation of a systemic disease such as thyrotoxicosis, or (4)
a benign somatic symptom that is amplified by underlying psychosocial characteristics of the patient.

Palpitations in patients with a known history of cardiac disease or palpitations that occur during sleep increase the ikelihood of a cardiac arrhythmia. A history of panic disorder  or palpitations that last < 5 minutes make a cardiac arrhythmia slightly less likely. Patients who seek medical attention in the emergency department instead of a medical clinic are more likely to have a cardiac etiology (47% versus 21%), while psychiatric causes are more common among patients with palpitations who seek medical attention in office practices (45% versus 27%). In a study of patients who went to a university medical clinic with the chief complaint of palpitations, etiologies were cardiac in 43%, psychiatric in 31%, and miscellaneous in 10% (including illicit drugs, medications, anemia, thyrotoxicosis, and mastocytosis).

Cardiac arrhythmias that can result in symptoms of palpitations include sinus bradycardia; sinus, supraventricular, and ventricular tachycardia; premature ventricular and atrial contractions; sick sinus syndrome; and advanced atrioventricular block.

Nonarrhythmic cardiac causes of palpitations include valvular heart diseases, such as aortic insufficiency or stenosis, atrial or ventricular septal defect, cardiomyopathy, congenital heart disease, and pericarditis.

Noncardiac causes of palpitations include fever, dehydration, hypoglycemia, anemia, thyrotoxicosis, and pheochromocytoma. Drugs such as cocaine, alcohol, caffeine, and pseudoephedrine can precipitate palpitations, as can prescription medications, including digoxin, phenothiazines, theophylline, and b-agonists as well as ephedra-containing herbal remedies or supplements, which are  banned by the US Food and Drug Administration.

The most common psychiatric causes of palpitations are anxiety and panic disorder. The release of catecholamines during a panic attack or significant stress can trigger an arrhythmia. Asking a single question, “Have you experienced brief periods, for seconds or minutes, of an overwhelming panic or terror that was accompanied by racing heartbeats, shortness of breath, or dizziness?” can help identify patients with panic disorder.

Treatment

After ambulatory monitoring, most patients with palpitations are found to have benign atrial or ventricular ectopy and nonsustained ventricular tachycardia. In patients with structurally normal hearts, these arrhythmias are not associated with adverse outcomes. Abstention from caffeine and tobacco may help. Often, reassurance suffices. If not, or in very symptomatic patients, a trial of a b-blocker may be prescribed. For treatment of specific atrial or ventricular arrhythmias, see Chapter 10.

When to Refer

• For electrophysiologic studies.
• For advice regarding treatment of atrial or ventricular arrhythmias.

When to Admit

• Palpitations associated with syncope or near-syncope, particularly when the patient is aged 75 years or older and has an abnormal ECG, hematocrit < 30%, shortness of breath, respiratory rate > 24/min, or a history of CHF.
• Patients with risk factors for a serious arrhythmia.

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