Before the procedure
You typically can't eat or drink anything for about eight hours before cardioversion.
Your healthcare team tells you whether to take any of your regular medicines before your treatment.
During the procedure
Cardioversion is usually done in the hospital. A healthcare professional puts an IV into your forearm or hand. You get medicine called a sedative to help you feel calm or less anxious during the treatment.
If you're having chemical cardioversion, you get medicine through the IV that resets the heart rhythm.
If you're having electric cardioversion, a health professional places several large patches with sensors on them on your chest and sometimes your back. Wires connect the sensors to a machine. The machine records your heart rhythm. It then delivers quick, low-energy shocks to the heart to treat the irregular heartbeats. Electric cardioversion usually takes only a few minutes to complete.
After the procedure
You usually spend an hour or so in a recovery room. A healthcare professional closely watches you for any complications.
If electric cardioversion was a scheduled procedure, you can usually go home the same day. You need someone to drive you home.
After cardioversion, you get blood-thinning medicines to prevent blood clots. You typically take these medicines for several weeks. You need blood thinners even if no clots were found in your heart before the treatment.