Returning to an Active Lifestyle
When Becky Holter began planning her wedding, she couldn't have imagined how
much her health would interfere with her plans. Becky was born with a hole in
her heart and a leaking mitral valve. A year before her August 1997 wedding,
she was chronically fatigued and received a stress test and an
echocardiogram. Becky had developed chronic atrial flutter, a rhythm
disorder that causes the heart to beat fast. She received cardioversion therapy
to terminate the arrhythmia and was hospitalized for further testing. Her
doctors placed her on anti-arrhythmic medication and performed surgery to
repair her septum and reduce the size of her enlarged right atrium.

Becky’s atrial flutter resumed shortly after the heart surgery, despite
modifications to her drug regimen. For a full-month before her wedding, she
experienced continuous atrial flutter. In November 1997, Marshall Stanton,
MD at the Mayo Clinic performed a mapping and ablation
procedure with the EnSite®
System that terminated her chronic atrial flutter.
Now arrhythmia free for more than two years, Becky no longer needs frequent naps
or arrhythmia medication. Her energy has returned, and she has resumed an
active lifestyle with her husband Jeff that includes hiking, horseback riding,
and biking.

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