Geoffrey W. Lee is a cardiologist based in Grattan Street, Parkville (VIC 3010), Australia. His work focuses on helping people with heart rhythm issues and other heart-related problems that can affect everyday life.
In many cases, patients come in because they’ve felt irregular beats, fast heart rates, or episodes of dizziness and feeling unwell. Geoffrey looks after conditions such as atrial fibrillation, heart block, sick sinus syndrome, and a range of tachycardias. He also helps with things like cardiomyopathy and heart failure, where the heart muscle or heart pumping can be affected.
A big part of the care here involves arrhythmias and treatments that can settle the symptoms down. This includes support for people with supraventricular tachycardia (like AVNRT and PSVT), atrial tachycardia, and ectopic heartbeats. At times, it also covers more serious rhythm problems, including ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation.
Geoffrey also works with people who may need procedures such as cardiac ablation. For some patients, ablation is about stopping the abnormal rhythm from coming back. Others may be managing episodes as part of a longer-term plan, with careful monitoring and follow-up.
Sleep and circulation symptoms can come up too. For example, obstructive sleep apnoea can link with heart strain and rhythm problems, and POTS (postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome) can cause fast heart rate when standing. Geoffrey’s approach is practical and based on what’s happening to the person’s body, not just the results on a report.
Some medical conditions listed under his service area aren’t heart-only, and may affect the way the heart behaves or how symptoms show up. These can include problems like lichen planus or lichen sclerosus, and conditions such as EBstein’s anomaly. There are also mentions of other health concerns where getting the heart side checked is important.
Experience, education, and research details aren’t listed here, so it’s best to check with the practice for the latest information on training and areas of study. Clinical trials details aren’t provided either.