Silent to Symptomatic: Arrhythmias Across Daily Life and Exercise
Resting or racing - your heart can whisper or warn. Let’s uncover arrhythmias and the power of continuous remote monitoring.
Date and time
Location
Online
Agenda
9:00 AM - 9:05 AM
Welcome and Introductions
Dr Manav Bhushan
9:05 AM - 9:20 AM
The Silent Spectrum: Arrhythmias in Resting States
Dr Niraj Varma
9:20 AM - 9:35 AM
Exercise-Induced Arrhythmias: Risks and Realities
Dr Tamanna Singh
9:35 AM - 9:40 AM
Managing AFib with Continuous Monitoring: A Patient’s Experience
Ron Kimura
9:40 AM - 9:45 AM
When Ventricular Tachycardia Strikes: A User’s Story
Bryan Hoare
9:45 AM - 9:55 AM
Q&A
Dr Manav Bhushan
Dr Niraj Varma
Dr Tamanna Singh
9:55 AM - 10:00 AM
Closing Note
Dr Manav Bhushan
Good to know
Highlights
- 1 hour
- Online
About this event
Arrhythmias can be silent at rest or appear during activity, yet often go unnoticed. Short-term checks may miss them. Continuous ECG monitoring reveals these hidden rhythm disturbances across daily life, helping doctors detect arrhythmias early, reduce risks like stroke or sudden cardiac events, and guide safer exercise for athletes and active individuals. Join Cleveland Clinic experts to learn what your heart might be telling you—and why continuous, real-world monitoring is a game-changer.
What can you expect from the event?
(A) Arrhythmias at Rest – Learn why many arrhythmias remain silent, how they go undetected, and the risks they pose even without obvious symptoms.
(B) Exercise-Induced Arrhythmias – Understand how exertion can trigger arrhythmias, what that means for athletes and active individuals, and how to manage the risks.
(C) Technology in Action – Discover how device-based and continuous ECG monitoring reveal hidden arrhythmias that short-term tests often miss.
(D) Case Insights – Real-world examples of arrhythmias from atrial fibrillation to ventricular tachycardia, and what they teach us about patient safety and athlete performance.
(E) Q&A with Cleveland Clinic Experts – Ask your questions directly to leading cardiologists specializing in electrophysiology and sports cardiology.
Who is it for?
This webinar is for:
- Individuals living with cardiac conditions or concerned about their heart rhythm
- Healthcare professionals managing arrhythmias in patients
- Athletes and fitness enthusiasts navigating the balance between performance and heart health
- Anyone curious about how arrhythmias affect daily life and why monitoring matters
Panelists & Speakers
Dr. Niraj Varma, MD, PhD, FRCP
Professor of Medicine, Section of Electrophysiology and Pacing, Cleveland Clinic
- An electrophysiologist’s perspective on arrhythmias at rest
- Why many disturbances remain silent and undetected
- How device-based and continuous monitoring are transforming arrhythmia management
Dr. Tamanna Singh, MD, FACC
Director, Sports Cardiology Center, Cleveland Clinic
- Insights into exercise-induced arrhythmias and their implications
- Case discussions from atrial fibrillation to ventricular tachycardia
- How continuous monitoring supports safe return-to-play and long-term heart health
Ron Kimura
An 81-year-old retired businessman and former triathlete who has reinvented himself many times—as a board member, nonprofit leader, writer, and now host of Ron Kimura’s Real Talk Interview on YouTube. In early 2025, after undergoing a pacemaker and Watchman procedure, Ron was diagnosed with asymptomatic AFib. He turned to the Frontier X2 to track his rhythm in daily life and consult with his electrophysiologists on his AFib burden. The device has since become a valuable tool in his recovery and ongoing heart health management.
Bryan Hoare
A wellness strategist and endurance athlete with 30+ years leading integrative health and hospitality across 20 countries, including work with Mandarin Oriental, Soneva, Oberoi and Six Senses. A 10-time Ironman and ultrarunner, he spent decades competing at world level while unknowingly carrying a 22x28 mm atrial septal defect, repaired in February 2024.Later that year, Fourth Frontier tracked Bryan's nine conscious minutes of ventricular tachycardia, which led to cardiac ablation surgery in December. A sequence that highlights both the fragility of life and the power of technology to protect it.
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