What your device actually does, how to live with it safely, what an ICD shock means and when to call 911 vs. Dr. Nyange, MRI and airport security guidance, and the conversations about device deactivation that are part of complete care.
A pacemaker implant or ICD procedure takes under an hour. The discharge education often takes five minutes. Patients go home with a device that can deliver an electric shock, that has specific MRI requirements, that needs its battery checked periodically, and that is monitoring their heart 24 hours a day — often without a clear explanation of any of this.
This guide provides the device education that should accompany every implant: complete, clear, and covering the specific scenarios — the shock, the airport, the MRI — that patients actually encounter.
What it monitors, when it fires, how rate-responsive pacing works, and the leadless option.
ATP vs. shock therapy, why the shock happens, how to respond to it, and the subcutaneous ICD option.
How cardiac resynchronization works, who benefits, and the CRT-P vs. CRT-D distinction.
Long-term monitoring for unexplained syncope and suspected paroxysmal AFib.
MRI compatibility, airport security, cell phones, power tools, medical procedures — all covered.
Single shock, multiple shocks, shock during exertion — exactly when to call Dr. Nyange vs. call 911.
“An ICD is not a treatment for heart disease — it is a safety net. The shock it delivers is proof the device did its job. What patients sometimes miss is that the underlying condition that made the ICD necessary still requires full medical management. The device and the medications work together.”
Complete device education — the guide your implant team should have given you.
Get Cardiac Devices Guide — $37