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The phrase "an implanted pacemaker" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a medical device that is surgically placed inside a patient's body to help regulate their heartbeat.
Example: "After experiencing irregular heartbeats, the doctor recommended that she get an implanted pacemaker to monitor her heart's rhythm."
Alternatives: "a surgically placed pacemaker" or "an inserted pacemaker".
Exact(15)
The need for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with an implanted pacemaker or implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is a growing clinical issue.
Mr. Zhao had heart bypass surgery last year, a family friend said, and now has an implanted pacemaker.
At a Stockholm hospital in 1958, a 43-year-old engineer became the first person to receive an implanted pacemaker.
The study, published in the journal Heart Rhythm, found that all it took to cause electrical interference in an implanted pacemaker was holding an iPod two inches from a patient's chest.
If you live near a nuclear power plant, fly in airplanes, ride in cars or trains, have an implanted pacemaker, keep money in the bank, or carry a phone, your safety and well-being depend on a robust, evolving, practice of network security.
Over the years, Mr. Cheney has had angioplasty to unblock coronary arteries and stents to keep them open; an implanted pacemaker and defibrillator; surgery to repair aneurysms, or ballooning of arteries, behind both knees; and a number of visits to George Washington University Hospital for monitoring and observation, the last in June.
Similar(45)
The LVI waveform derived by the implanted pacemaker right after implantation fully corresponded to the signal recorded in the same patient by the external device and remained essentially stable for some hours (Table 2 ).
Exclusion criteria included any contraindication to MR imaging such as an implanted cardiac pacemaker or claustrophobia.
The Implanted Device Adjustment Scale (IDAS) measures the psychological adjustment of a patient to an implanted (ICD) pacemaker.
Neurological disorders such as stroke or epilepsy, drug/alcohol dependence, major psychiatric co-morbidities and implanted pacemaker may be seen as an exclusion criterion.
Radiographic data were merged with the data obtained from the NEEES during pacing from implanted pacemaker leads or pacing from endocardial sites using an electroanatomical mapping system (CARTO 3, Biosense Webster).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com