A premature ventricular contraction (PVC) is an early heartbeat that happens between normal heartbeats. Most PVCs are harmless.
The sinus node acts as the heart's pacemaker. This cluster of cells generates the electrical impulses that control the heart's rhythm. It's in the right atrium, in the upper right side of the heart. A PVC happens when an early heartbeat starts in one of the ventricles, the heart's two lower chambers.
Premature ventricular contractions can feel like a skipped or pounding heartbeat. Some kids with PVCs get dizzy and may feel like they're going to faint.
Doctors aren't sure what causes PVCs. Some things that may trigger them are:
To diagnose a PVC, doctors listen to the heart, check the child's health, and do some tests. Many PVC tests look at the heart's electrical signals as it beats to "see" the heart working.
Tests for kids with PVCs are painless. They include:
Most kids with PVCs have healthy hearts and do not need special care. If your child has heart problems or gets PVCs often, your cardiologist may prescribe medicine to make them happen less often.
For a few kids who have heart disease and PVCs, a heart procedure called an ablation can help. Ablation (a-BLAY-shen) destroys or scars a tiny area of tissue where the early heartbeat starts.
PVCs can't be prevented, but you and your child can do some things so they don't get worse:
Reviewed by: Joel D. Temple, MD, Daphney Kernizan, DO
Date Reviewed: Nov 11, 2019