This patient support community is for discussions relating to Dysautonomia (Autonomic Dysfunction) including: Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), neurocardiogenic syncope, mitral valve prolapse dysautonomia, pure autonomic failure, autonomic instability and others.
As far as the meds, I am not much help there. I am waiting to go to Vanderbilt to have the autonomic testing done and will then be started on some of this I imagine. I have had trouble for 7-8 years with this. No one knew what was going on. Finally, I went to a diagnostic clininc and the neurologist I saw just happened to have a wife with dyso. So that is how my adventure has started.
On the referral, it depends alot on your insurance. For me, I can get into cardiologist, neurologist, etc without a referral, but to go to Vandy I have to have one. I would check with them first just to make sure.
I understand how you are feeling right now. I am going through the same thing. I have just cut down to 10-12 hours a week for a little while. I actually told them I wanted to quit, but I know if I don't do something, I will sit at home and go crazy. They agreed to let me work a couple of hours a couple of days a week.
There are days that I don't know how I am going to make it. I always seem to pull through. It is hard. No one at home really knows what I am going through and it is hard to describe. I have been lucky to find this forum. They have answered many questions and have shown a lot of support. I hope all of us can be of help to you also.
Ace
TTT protocols vary widely from hospital to hospital so some may administer an adrenaline-like hormone and others do not (regardless of how you are responding to the test). Some only consider a test "positive" if the patient actually faints, while others ask the patient to warn them if a faint is imminent and do their best to spare patients that discomfort and lower the table before a faint if possible. Because of the ambiguity in interpretation, unless you're getting the tilt done at an actual autonomic clinic (Vanderbilt, Mayo, Cleveland, etc.), I would highly recommend getting an actual hard copy of the results yourself. That is frequently much more useful than whatever verbal interpretation you will get from the cardiologist. (The exception for the autonomic clinics is because they already do generate reports including actual numerical values/percentages based on the testing, rather than giving vague test results such as "passed" or "failed" TTT.)
I think at this point you may benefit from reading more about dysautonomia and POTS. We have several good introductory articles here that talk about diagnosis and treatment options:
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Further-Reading-on-Dysautonomia/show/696?cid=196
Please feel free to ask us whatever questions you may have. And if you feel like poking around our Health Pages a bit more, some of these may be of interest (some are works in progress, so pardon our dust):
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Autonomic-Dysfunction-FAQ/show/181?cid=196
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Dysautonomia-Treatments/show/171?cid=196
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Dysautonomia-Specialists/show/717?cid=196
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Diagnosing-Dysautonomia/show/827?cid=196
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Dysautonomia--Salt-Loading--List-of-Salty-Foods/show/989?cid=196
http://www.medhelp.org/health_pages/Neurological-Disorders/Dysautonomia--POTS-Diagnostic-Criteria/show/1011?cid=196
It doesn't take very long. Though it isn't a very pleasant test, they put me down immediately when I stopped responding to their frequent questions about if I was okay or not. It was a little bit more difficult I think with me, because my eyes were wide open, the nurse said, but I had stopped responding. When I fainted, I started seeing kind of a swirling grayness and was dreaming. When I awoke, the doctor said hi and I asked who he was but with the surgical hats the nurses were wearing, I quickly remembered where I was.
I hope they tested your blood iron level, which when low can aggravate tachycardia. It doesn't take the iron getting so low that your CBC is outside normal range to aggravate the tachycardia when you already have a problem (personal experience in the past).
At the beginning, my stats were BP 126/79 HR 77; at 20 min it went to BP 129/87 HR 101, so they gave me 1 squirt of Nitro which raised my BP 137/71 HR 109. By minute #4, I had a syncopal event with no palpable pulse and HR dropped precipitously to 20 bpm & crashed, but had no clue I even fainted.
I woke up to the dr holding my knees up and asking if I was ok - my BP 97/48 HR 78 wouldn't go above this, so they just took me back to my room and told the nurses. I've been told it's rare for a patient to have no bp and no pulse during this test like I had.
I would definitely ask for a tilt test though for a possible diagnosis; my EP ordered mine.