Bundle branch block refers to a disorder of the heart's electrical conducting system.
The function of the bundles is to speed the electrical impulse and distribute it in a pattern which makes later heart muscle contraction forceful and coordinated. As electrical impulses travel down these bundles, they spread over the associated ventricle to the muscle fibers, stimulating the fibers to contract in a rhythmic manner, squeezing blood out of the ventricles and into the arterial circulation.
Because the left ventricle is larger, the left bundle divides into an anterior left bundle and a posterior left bundle, the former controlling the front wall of the left ventricle, and the latter controlling the back wall of the left ventricle.
Many people with bundle branch blocks may still be quite active, and may have nothing more remarkable than an abnormal appearance to their EKG. However, when bundle blocks are complex and diffuse in the bundle systems, or associated with additional and significant ventricular muscle damage, they may be a sign of serious underlying heart disease. In more severe cases, a pacemaker may be required to re-establish better heart muscle function.
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