An implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is a small electronic device placed inside the body to help control dangerous heart rhythms.
What it does
The heart normally beats in a steady rhythm, but some people develop life-threatening irregular rhythms (called arrhythmias), especially:
- Ventricular tachycardia
- Ventricular fibrillation
An ICD continuously monitors your heartbeat. If it detects a dangerous rhythm, it can:
- Deliver rapid pacing impulses to correct it, or
- Send a stronger shock to reset the heart back to normal rhythm
How it’s implanted
- Transvenous ICD
- This is the most conventional type of ICD
- The device is usually placed under the skin near the collarbone
- Thin wires (leads) are threaded through veins into the heart
- The procedure is typically done under local anaesthesia with sedation
- Subcutaneous ICD
- A different type of implantable defibrillator is a ‘subcutaneous’ defibrillator.
- This doesn’t have any leads into the heart, but has a lead running under the skin of the left side of the chest and up alongside the breast bone (sternum).
- This is connected to the defibrillator which is positioned under the skin on the left side of the chest, under the armpit.
- Only a small proportion of patients will benefit from a subcutaneous rather than transvenous ICD currently – your doctor will discuss the merits of each with you
Who needs one
Doctors may recommend an ICD for people who:
- Have survived a cardiac arrest
- Have certain heart conditions that increase the risk of sudden death
- Have severe heart failure or inherited rhythm disorders
What it feels like
- Most of the time, you won’t notice it working
- If it delivers a shock, it can feel like a sudden jolt or thump in the chest
Why it matters
ICDs are one of the most effective ways to prevent death from sudden cardiac arrest caused by dangerous arrhythmias.
