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CURRENT NEWS & EVENTS

Are You Ready to Run?


Union Hospital's Children's Classic Run, a 1-mile walk and run for children in grades kindergarten through eighth, will be Saturday, September 27. Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. Race start time is approximately 10 a.m
Click here for registration materials
There's lifesaving news in health care for the Wabash Valley!


Union Hospital and West Central Community Hospital have earned accreditation from the Society of Chest Pain Centers.
Click here to learn more
The New Hux Cancer Center is now open.

One Team, One Focus...You!
AP&S Oncology, Hope Center, Union Hospital Radiation Oncology, and soon, Clara Fairbanks Center for Women have joined forces in the new 88,000-square-foot facility.
Click here to learn more

printTHE HUX CARDIOVASCULAR CENTER AT UNION HOSPITAL

Electrophysiology Lab

In order for your heart to do its work (to pump oxygen rich blood throughout your body) it needs electrical energy to generate a heartbeat.

This impulse begins in the Sinus (SA) Node, which is the heart's natural pacemaker. The SA Node is located in the heart's upper right chamber. From there the impulse travels down a specialized system of conductive tissues, causing the heart muscle to contract in an orderly sequence. The two upper chambers of the heart squeeze a little earlier than the lower two chambers.

The SA node sends impulses that cause your heart to beat normally -- 60 to 100 beats per minute. Depending on your activity, your heart beats lower (at rest) or faster (with activity).

There are conditions where the electrical impulse becomes blocked during its journey, causing an abnormally slow heartbeat (Bradycardia). In other conditions, an abnormal or "irritable pacemaker" outside the Sinus Node may cause an unusually fast heartbeat called Tachycardia. If the Tachycardia comes from the upper chambers of the heart it is referred to as SVT or Supraventricular Tachycardia. If it comes from the lower chambers, it is referred to as VT or Ventricular Tachycardia.

Once a heart rhythm disturbance has been suspected, your doctor will recommend an EP Study. Your EP Study will be performed in a laboratory with special diagnostic equipment and heart monitoring devises. An Electrophysiologist, a cardiologist who specializes in the electrical conduction of the heart, will conduct the study.

For EP Study patient information, click here.