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Sinus Arrhythmia The sinus node emits an irregular impulse that causes the heart rate to alternate between fast and slow heartbeats.
**: Mainly due to hypervagal tone or decreased sympathetic excitability. The causes are usually physiological, such as in older people, athletes, or during sleep.
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Normal young people have occasional arrhythmias, and if your arrhythmias are rare, then you're fine.
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If it is sinus arrhythmia. Does not affect conscription.
According to the conscription medical examination standards, the following conditions are qualified:
1) Heart rate: 60 100 beats.
2) Heart rate: 50 90 beats, 101 110 beats or arrhythmia, systolic murmur, etc., which need to be clinical, electrocardiogram or other examinations, and it is physiological. Divers, airborne troops and recruits who have been reinstated into the plateau area are strictly controlled.
The frequency of normal sinus rhythm is generally 60 to 100 beats. So within the range of qualification.
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Irregular arrhythmia in young recruits generally refers to sinus arrhythmia. According to the relevant regulations: sinus arrhythmia, which can mostly improve or disappear after inhalation and breath-holding, is judged to be roughly normal ECG and does not affect conscription.
According to Article 15 of the standards for medical examinations for conscription published in 2003:
2) Heart rate: 50 90 beats, 101 110 beats or arrhythmia, systolic murmur, etc., which need to be clinical, electrocardiogram or other examinations, and be physiologically qualified. Divers, airborne troops and recruits who have been reinstated into the plateau area are strictly controlled.
According to the notice on the issuance of diagnostic standards for electrocardiogram and abdominal ultrasound for conscription physical examination (Guo Zheng 2009 No. 12).
Conscription physical examination ECG project:
2. Approximately normal ECG.
1. Sinus rhythm, 50-60 beats or 100-110 beats, combined with clinical practice.
2. Sinus arrhythmia can mostly improve or disappear after inhalation and breath-holding.
3. The P-wave axis deviates to the left (the P-wave is upright in I, VL and the voltage is high, low flat or positive and negative biphasic, VF positive and negative biphasic or shallow inverted, VR negative positive biphasic or shallow inverted).
4. Sinus rhythm, p-r interval, exclude previous history of supragricular tachycardia.
5. Simple QRS axis offset is -30 to +120 degrees.
6. Simple anti-clocking or clockwise transposition.
7. The terminal QRS complex is wide and blunt, but the QRS time is less, and there is obvious pre-shock wave, but there is no history of supraventricular tachycardia.
8. Left ventricular high voltage (no hypertension, no pathological murmur on cardiac auscultation, no cardiac enlargement on chest X-ray).
9. When the heart rhythm is slow, the R wave is the dominant joint J point elevation, and the St segment is concave and upward elevation is less than.
10. The ischemic pressure in the ST segment dominated by the R wave is less than or equal to MV (VL, which can be depressed or is approximately horizontal, and the depression is less than MV, or the upward slope type is less than MV.
11. The T wave is upright, and the voltage is greater than 1 10R wave; vf low flat, inverted.
12. TV1 and V2 are greater than TV5 and V6 (TV5 and V6 are greater than 1 10R wave).
If the ECG findings mentioned above appear, the subject can be asked to squat on the spot 20 times, and if there are no obvious abnormal pathological changes in the ECG, it will be regarded as a roughly normal ECG.
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Look at your checklist, it must be written "sinus arrhythmia".
Sinus arrhythmia" is a normal physiological phenomenon that does not require treatment.
Whoever doesn't have a "sinus arrhythmia" is probably a Martian.
Sinus arrhythmia "doesn't affect you at all."
Sinus arrhythmia is usually associated with changes in intrathoracic pressure caused by the respiratory cycle, and the heart changes its beating speed to regulate the filling and outputting of blood in the heart, which is a normal physiological phenomenon. Nowadays, many doctors have also noticed the panic caused by "sinus arrhythmia", so they will write "sinus rhythm" when diagnosing. In addition, factors such as nervousness may also cause "sinus arrhythmia", which is not necessary**.
If you do have an irregular heartbeat, the doctor will write down one of the following types, and it is impossible to write the words "irregular heartbeat" to dismiss you.
1. Sinus bradycardia.
2. Extra-period contraction, early contraction.
3. Atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter.
4. Wolf Parkinson-White Syndrome.
5. Sinus tachycardia.
6. Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia.
7. Ventricular tachyrhythmia and ventricular flutter.
8. Heart block.
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Analysis: If the physical examination shows that you have an irregular heartbeat, then you cannot be a soldier. But if it's not powerful, maybe the doctor will ignore it.
Guidance: Can you go to the army, go and try, it is also good to be a soldier now. If you want to be a soldier, go to be a soldier, it is also glorious to be a soldier to defend the country, I wish you good health. May God bless the grace.
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Absolutely! It's okay to ask this question, as long as you are not pilots and submariners, you will not look into this!
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Many of the soldiers had irregular heart rates....So it should be fine.
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Hello, there are actually a lot of healthy young people who have irregular heartbeats, and this is quite normal. It's not pathological, and it's not necessary. Sometimes nervousness, heavy smoking, drinking alcohol, drinking strong tea or coffee, excessive fatigue, severe insomnia, etc., can cause irregular heartbeats.
If the arrhythmia is caused by a disease of the heart itself, then it is difficult for you to go to the army.
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Whether you can do general anesthesia for sinus arrhythmia depends on the severity of your arrhythmia, if it is not very severe, there should be no problem.
Anesthesia, especially general anesthesia, can cause harm to the body and in the most severe cases, it may lead to cardiac arrest and cause danger. Otherwise, the phrase "may cause anesthesia accidents" would not appear on all surgical consent forms.
To put it another way: as long as your doctor agrees to give you a general anesthetic at the time of surgery, it means that they don't think you have a big problem. Rest assured, your anesthesiologist must have had a detailed discussion with a cardiovascular specialist about your situation before administering anesthesia to you, otherwise he won't take the risk.
In addition, general anesthesia is carried out in the operating room, where the drugs and various equipment are complete, and the masters are gathered, which is the highest level of rescue in the whole hospital, and the patient does not need to worry at all after entering, because it is useless to worry. Therefore, whether you can use general anesthesia for your surgery: please respect your doctor's advice!
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Depending on the irregular heart rhythm, it depends on your age and heart rate. Combined with past medical history. The anesthesiologist may need you to do a color ultrasound.
If you have no previous history of cardiovascular disease, are in your young adulthood, and your heart rate is higher than 60, I personally think that the ECG may be undiagnostic due to some of your excessive attention to the examination. If the heart rate is below 50, sinus disease should also be considered.
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It can be done, propofol does not have a great impact on the heart, and yours is sinus arrhythmia, there should be no problem, but the dosage of propofol should be paid attention to, if the dosage is large, it may inhibit myocardial contractility.
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Hello, I'm a cardiovascular doctor, and in a word, it's completely okay to tell you! Sinus arrhythmias are predominantly seen in normal people. You can rest assured. Peace be upon you!
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OK. I also have sinus arrhythmia, which doesn't affect it. Sinus arrhythmia is just a lack of tissue in the atrium, as long as you don't put too much burden on your mind, there will definitely be no problem.
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It can be done because sinus arrhythmia is mainly affected by breathing, and many people have it
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If it's sinus arrhythmia, it's fine, many people have it, it's normal.
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No, playing mahjong will be stressful.
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No, ** itself is fatal, it is a great evil, and it will bring great harm to yourself!
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Can't do it. If you have heart disease, it is generally not recommended that you do intravenous general anesthesia surgery, which will aggravate your condition, and the operation will also cause various diseases due to the inability to control the heartbeat.
I had no heart problems before I did ****, but after doing it, I obviously felt that my heart rate would be uneven, and I would feel like I was beating from time to time, which should be the sequelae of venous general anesthesia.
Specifically, it is recommended that you go to the anesthesiology department to consult a doctor, which is more safe.
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You say how much you can live.
I advise you not to think so.
This mindset is very negative.
It may worsen the condition.
That's what you should think.
Life. Happy is a day.
It's also a day to be unhappy.
Why not seize the present.
Happy every day?
You have to open everything.
Sinus arrhythmias are common arrhythmias, but most of these conditions are respiratory sinus arrhythmias that change with breathing, increase during inhalation, slow down during exhalation, and become regular when holding breath. This arrhythmia is mostly a physiological phenomenon that occurs more often in children and the elderly, and is more common in children over 3 years of age.
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