In certain cases, your doctor may prescribe an implantable device to assist your heart.
Pacemakers and Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators
(ICDs) are used to treat
arrhythmias
— a condition of heart rhythm problems that
occurs when the electrical impulses that coordinate your
heartbeats don’t function properly, causing your
heart to beat too fast, too slow or irregularly. The Left
Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD) helps maintain the pumping
ability of your heart.
Click on the name of the medical device in the chart to learn more.
Click on this picture in the chart to see an illustration of a medical device.
The left ventricle is the large, muscular chamber of the heart that pumps blood out to the body. A left ventricular assist device (LVAD) is a battery-operated, mechanical pump-type device that's surgically implanted.
Helps maintain the pumping ability of a heart that can't effectively work on its own.
Sometimes used as a “bridge to transplant” for patients waiting for a heart transplant.
A small device that has wires which are implanted in the heart tissue to send electrical impulses that help the heart beat in a regular rhythm. The device is powered by a battery.
When the heart’s “
natural
pacemaker
” is defective and causes the
heart to beat too fast, too slow or irregularly,
a pacemaker helps the heart beat in a regular
rhythm.
A device that has wires which are implanted into the heart tissue and can deliver electrical shocks, detect the rhythm of the heart and sometimes “pace” the heart’s rhythms, as needed.