The goals of sick sinus treatment are to reduce or eliminate symptoms and to manage any other contributing health conditions.
Treatment of sick sinus syndrome may include:
- Regular checkups
- Medications
- Catheter procedures
- Surgery to implant a device to maintain a regular heartbeat (pacemaker)
If you don't have symptoms, your health care provider may simply recommend regular health checkups to monitor your condition. Most people with symptoms need to have a procedure to implant a device to maintain a regular heartbeat (pacemaker).
Medications
Some medications, including those used to treat high blood pressure or heart disease, may interfere with sinus node function. Your health care provider will likely review the medications you take and may adjust them or prescribe different ones.
Medications may be needed to prevent or to slow down fast heartbeats.
Blood-thinners (anticoagulants), such as warfarin (Jantoven), dabigatran (Pradaxa) or others, may be prescribed if sick sinus syndrome is associated with atrial fibrillation or other irregular heart rhythms linked to stroke.
Surgeries or other procedures
Most people with sick sinus syndrome eventually need a permanent device to control the heart rhythm (pacemaker). A pacemaker is a small, battery-powered device that's implanted under the skin near the collarbone during a minor surgical procedure. The pacemaker stimulates (paces) the heart as needed to keep it beating regularly.
If sick sinus syndrome symptoms are mild or infrequent, the decision to use a pacemaker will depend on the results of electrocardiograms (ECGs), your overall health and the risk of more-serious problems.
The type of pacemaker you need depends on the type of irregular heart rhythm you have. Types of pacemakers include:
- Single chamber pacemaker. This type usually carries electrical signals to the right lower heart chamber (ventricle) of the heart.
- Dual chamber pacemaker. This type paces the right lower heart chamber (ventricle) and the right upper heart chamber (atrium) separately. Most people with sick sinus syndrome benefit from dual-chamber pacemakers.
- Biventricular pacemaker. Biventricular pacing, also called cardiac resynchronization therapy, is for people who have heart failure and heartbeat problems. This type of pacemaker stimulates both lower heart chambers (the right and left ventricles) to make the heart beat more efficiently.
If your heart rate is still irregular after getting a pacemaker, you may need medications or a catheter-based procedure called cardiac ablation to correct or control it. Cardiac ablation uses heat or cold energy to create tiny scars in the heart to block faulty signals and restore a regular heartbeat. It's most often done using thin, flexible tubes called catheters inserted through the veins or arteries. Less commonly, ablation is performed during cardiac surgery. A type of cardiac ablation called AV node ablation is often used to control fast heart rhythms in people with pacemakers.