jhoot,
Afib is very common in the population. Some people have an isolated episode without recurrence. These are usually brought about by some type of stress.
More commonly, people have recurrences of fibrillation. In people with normal hearts, they may not even realize they are in fibrillation. What you might be feeling are episodes of fibrillation, or just normal heart beats. The only way to figure it out would be with some type of ambualtory ecg monitoring like event monitoring. You can slip in and out, and monitoring would confirm this. It isnt detrimental to be in fibrillation as long as it doesnt impact your lifestyle.
It is important to figure out if these episodes are afib because it will assist in the treatment. Even if you do not feel the episodes, if you are having episodes of fibrillation it would be important to use some type of anticoagulation therapy to reduce your risk of embolism which is the biggest risk for most with fibrillation. I would discuss with your doctor the frequency of occurence and the risk/benefits of anticoagulation therapy with coumadin or aspirin.
No matter who your doctor is, you should be in a position to ask questions and get the answers you need. He/she should certainly be able to elaborate on these brief answers...hopefully they provide a guide.
good luck
It is also common to find that this type of afib can be treated quite effectively either by minimal doses of appropriate meds (eg, beta-blockers), or by ablation (if the episodes occur quite often and the meds don't work). The ablation route is pretty low risk and generally effective, based on where the offending electrically active cardiac tissue resides (usually in the pulmonary vein connections to the rear of the atria).
All these options should be discussed with an EP (cardiologist specializing in rhythm disturbances). My experience with general cardiologists suggests that many fall short of a full understanding of arrhythmias and their treatment.
Good luck,
Arthur
Hello,
Regarding alcohol and a-fib, alcohol(in small amounts) , in fact just a few beers can triggers a-fib, tachycardia, pacs and pvcs in some persons, usually felt during the night or the day after drinking. I have quit drinking beers for over 14 months and my palpitations mainly PVCs and sinus tachycardia are almost non existent since quitting, I used to average about 6 beers daily though i was not addicted , i just liked drinking beer. I quit without any symptoms of withdrawal whatsoever. I will never say that won't take another drink of alcohol, but I hope I live long enough to get the nerve to take another and I know i'll be around for quite sometime.
Take care.
I know they say 2 beers a day or glass of red wine is good for the heart but after having Afib 2 months ago I dont know if I should. My doctor said its ok for 1-2 glasses a day but I'd like a 2nd opinion for another doctor. I dont know what else caused my Afib. I'm only 40. After being on med's for a month I converted back on my own without cardioversion. What about yours?
Hi,
I never had documented a-fib , only frequent PVCs and sinus tachycardia in episodes usually related to drinking alcohol. I suspect that I might have had a few undocumented epiosdes of paroxysmal a-fib lasting only a few minutes all in association with drinking that night.
I take atenolol 100mg in divided doses(25mg 4 times daily) and cozaar 50mg daily. I also take valium and one aspirin 325mg daily(for ankylosing spondylitis), the atenolol and cozaar are for palpitations and for ultimate blood pressure control.
An echo in Jan 2001 only showed marginal concentic left ventricular hypertrophy and a redundancy of the mitral leaflets without any frank mitral valve prolapse with no leakage whatsoever and a EF of 65-75% on different shots.I was advised to curb my beer drinking as it was keeping my blood pressure on the high side and contributing to the development of LVH. I never followed this advice from the cardiologist til about 14 months(how stupid and ignorant of me being in the medical profession myself and knowing better) when I started to experience an increase in symptoms , after about 3 months of quitting the drinking I noticed a dramatic change in symptoms.
Every EKG taken since then has showed no signs LVH, though every EKG before suggested it, an EKG can falsely diagnosed LVH,(an echo is gold standard) but because the echo showed the early development of LVH, along with an ECG, my EKG tracing for LVH was considered accurate, within 6 months of quitting alcohol , the mild LVH had regressed, no suggestion on 3 different ekgs at least and B/P was under perfect control.
Alcohol is best avoided, especially if associated with palpitations, even though an average of 2 drinks every other day suggest some protection against coronary heart disease, I would say that the risks in drinking far outweigh the benefits for most and it is best avoided and can only be detrimental in the long term.Coincidently I will 40 on Nov 3 myself.
Good luck.