Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics
Ventricular extrasystoles, also called premature ventricular contractions or PVCs, are experienced by many people throughout their lives. Studies suggest that up to 75% of people may have them without even knowing it, and their occurrence increases naturally with age. Most of the time, these extra heartbeats happen without causing any noticeable symptoms, and people discover them only during routine medical examinations or tests done for other reasons.[1][6]
You should consider seeking diagnostic evaluation if you experience unusual sensations in your chest, such as fluttering, pounding, or the feeling that your heart has skipped a beat. Some people also report dizziness, feeling close to fainting, or a pounding sensation in the neck. If you have another heart condition already, you might notice that these extra beats cause shortness of breath or worsen your existing symptoms.[1][6]
It is important to understand that even if you have no symptoms at all, discovering ventricular extrasystoles during a routine checkup should still prompt a proper medical assessment. The presence or absence of symptoms does not determine whether complications might arise. Other factors, such as how many extra beats you have over a day, whether you have underlying heart disease, and certain patterns visible on your heart rhythm recording, are more important in predicting risk.[4][12]
People with known heart disease, a history of heart attacks, heart failure, high blood pressure, or certain types of heart muscle disease should be particularly attentive to ventricular extrasystoles. In these individuals, the extra beats may carry a higher risk of progressing to more serious irregular heart rhythms. Additionally, if you have a family history of sudden cardiac death or inherited heart conditions, diagnostic testing becomes even more important.[4][6]
Diagnostic Methods
The cornerstone of diagnosing ventricular extrasystoles is the electrocardiogram, commonly known as an ECG or EKG. This simple, non-invasive test records the electrical activity of your heart. During the test, small sticky patches with sensors are placed on your chest and sometimes on your arms and legs. These sensors connect to a machine that prints or displays the pattern of your heartbeat. An ECG can capture a ventricular extrasystole if it happens during the brief time you are being tested, showing a characteristic widened wave that represents the extra beat coming from the lower chambers of your heart.[9][14]
However, because ventricular extrasystoles can be infrequent and unpredictable, a standard ECG performed in a doctor’s office may not catch them. If your doctor suspects you have these extra beats but the ECG does not show them, you may be asked to wear a Holter monitor. This is a small, portable device that continuously records your heart’s electrical activity over 24 to 48 hours while you go about your daily activities. The Holter monitor captures a much longer recording window, making it far more likely to detect ventricular extrasystoles and determine how often they occur.[9][14]
Another option is an event monitor, which you may wear for up to 30 days. Unlike the Holter monitor, which records continuously, an event monitor typically records only when you press a button because you feel symptoms, or it may automatically start recording when it detects an irregular heartbeat. This can be particularly useful if your symptoms happen sporadically and unpredictably over longer periods.[9][14]
For some patients, an exercise stress test may be recommended. This test involves walking on a treadmill or riding a stationary bike while your heart’s activity is monitored. The goal is to see whether physical exertion triggers ventricular extrasystoles or makes them more frequent. In some cases, if extra beats continue to occur during exercise, this may suggest a different underlying cause or increased risk that needs further investigation.[9][14]
Beyond recording the heart’s electrical activity, doctors also need to determine whether you have any underlying structural heart disease. This is typically done using imaging tests. An echocardiogram is a common choice—it uses sound waves to create moving pictures of your heart, allowing the doctor to see the size and shape of the heart chambers, how well the heart muscle is pumping, and whether there are any valve problems or other structural abnormalities.[5]
In more complex cases, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, or CMR, may be used. This advanced imaging technique provides highly detailed images of the heart muscle and can detect subtle changes that might not be visible on an echocardiogram. It is particularly useful in identifying certain inherited heart muscle diseases or scarring from previous heart damage.[4]
Blood tests may also be part of the diagnostic workup. These can check for electrolyte imbalances, such as low levels of potassium or magnesium, which are known to trigger ventricular extrasystoles. Blood tests can also detect signs of other conditions, such as an overactive thyroid gland or anemia, that might contribute to irregular heartbeats.[6][13]
Your doctor will also take a detailed medical history and perform a physical examination. During the physical exam, they may listen to your heart with a stethoscope and feel your pulse. Sometimes, when a ventricular extrasystole occurs, the pulse at your wrist may feel weak or even absent, followed by a stronger-than-normal beat after a brief pause. This can provide valuable clues even before any testing is done.[13]
For patients with frequent or complex patterns of ventricular extrasystoles, especially those with known heart disease, an electrophysiological study may be considered. This is a more invasive test where thin, flexible wires called catheters are inserted into blood vessels and guided to the heart. The catheters can measure electrical signals directly from inside the heart and sometimes provoke extra beats intentionally to understand their origin and behavior. This test is usually reserved for cases where treatment decisions are complex or when more serious arrhythmias are suspected.[8]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
When ventricular extrasystoles are being studied in the context of clinical trials, specific diagnostic criteria are often used to ensure that enrolled patients have a measurable and consistent condition. Clinical trials typically require objective documentation of the frequency and characteristics of the extra beats, which is most reliably obtained through extended heart rhythm monitoring.[8]
A key measure used in clinical trial enrollment is the PVC burden, which refers to the total number of premature ventricular contractions recorded over a 24-hour period. Researchers often categorize patients based on whether they have a low, moderate, high, or very high burden. For example, a low burden might be defined as fewer than 5,000 extra beats per day (roughly 5% of all heartbeats), while a high burden could be 10,000 to 20,000 beats per day, and a very high burden exceeds 20,000 per day. Trials testing treatments for ventricular extrasystoles often require participants to have a certain minimum burden to ensure the intervention can be properly evaluated.[4]
In addition to counting the total number of extra beats, clinical trials may also look at the pattern and morphology of the ventricular extrasystoles. The appearance of the extra beat on the ECG can provide information about where in the heart it originates. For instance, some trials may specifically enroll patients whose extra beats come from a particular area, such as the right ventricular outflow tract, because this location is associated with a higher success rate for certain treatments like catheter ablation.[8]
Imaging studies, particularly echocardiography, are also standard requirements in clinical trial protocols. Researchers need to know whether participants have normal heart function or whether there is evidence of weakened heart muscle, valve disease, or other structural problems. Trials may specifically recruit patients with or without underlying heart disease, depending on the study’s goals. Measuring the ejection fraction—the percentage of blood pumped out of the heart with each beat—is a common way to assess heart function and is often used as an inclusion or exclusion criterion.[4]
Blood tests to rule out reversible causes of ventricular extrasystoles, such as electrolyte disturbances or thyroid problems, are also typically performed before enrolling patients in a trial. This ensures that the condition being studied is truly related to the heart rhythm itself and not secondary to a treatable underlying cause.[13]
Some clinical trials may use more advanced diagnostic tools, such as cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, to identify subtle structural abnormalities or areas of scarring that might influence treatment outcomes. This is particularly relevant in trials testing catheter ablation, where understanding the precise origin and mechanism of the extra beats is critical.[4]



