Male, 42
For the last 6 months I have gotten 6-8 hours of aerobic exercise a week. 10-20% of my exercise time is spent in the 160+ bpm range. Occasionally I'll get up to 8 hours of aerobic exercise in a day.
I have
borderlineBorderline personality disorder high blood
pressurePressure ulcer (at least as measured in a hospital environment) 90/140.
Based on an
EKGAtrioventricular block, ekg tracing
Ecg
Exercise stress test I have been diagnosed with left
ventricularParoxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (psvt)
Ultrasound, ventricular septal defect - heartbeat
Ventricular assist device
Ventricular fibrillation
Ventricular septal defect
Ventricular tachycardia hypertrophyEnlarged prostate
Lymphoid hyperplasia.
Is it possible that my LVH is caused by exercise rather than by high blood
pressurePressure ulcer or heart valve issues?
If LVH can be exercise induced is there any qualitative difference between thicker heart wall as induced by exercise and thicker heart wall induced by high blood pressure. Or to ask this question another way is LVH a risk factor for cardiovascular problems regardless of its cause.
Or is LVH a risk factor because the population of people who get EKGs (and might be diagnosed with LVH) are at greater risk than the general population.
Is there a way to differentiate between high blood pressure caused LVH and exercise caused LVH?
Thanks in advance for your response.
Jim
1. How long does it take the mild to moderate LVH to regress by controlling BP?
2. What medicines do help regress LVH?
3. After controlling the BP with medication for sometime, is it possible to bring down the BP normal by other methods: lifestyle changes, weight loss, excercise, meditation, stress management, etc. How many percentage pf people could control BP without medication?
4. What doe you think of Atenolol as a bp medicine?
Thanks.
Melinda
The criteria for LVH y ECG and by echo are different and denote different things. If someone is very thin, an ECG may mistake this as LVH. The echo is more sensitve.