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Heart Disease  (Expert Forum)
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Plpitations, fluttering, stopping.
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Plpitations, fluttering, stopping.

by LukeL, Feb 13, 2007 12:00AM
Starting way back in March of 2005 I started having real bad palpitations with no none cause. Many tests latewr (4+EKGs, ECHO with Doppler, blood tests (cardiac enzymes?), and holter monitor) all have showed nothing specific that would indicate a serious medical condition. But I have had two scary events, both upon awakening where I saw a black blob infront of my face, I was able to check my pulse during once of these events and it was steady and strong. Also during these events I was either on high dose beta blockers, or Valium which I have had a bad expiercne with.

Currently on toprol XL 25mg twice daily, and Paxil CR 12.5mg daily. The other night I had what I would call skipped beats where it felt like my entire body stopped working for 2-3 seconds followed by a surge of addrealine and a sick felling in my chest. These went on all night and it was the first time I felt anything for over a year.

My once PCP thought he saw a delta wave in two of my leads on an EKG and ordered the holter which he said was normal. Could I take this to mean I do not have WPW, even with a short PR interval. Also what are the odds things like LQTS, Brugada, Short QT, CPVT, RVOT etc. would not show up on multiple EKGs and/or a holter?

by Forum-M.D.-MM, Feb 17, 2007 12:00AM
Hello,

If there is suspicion that you have a tachycardia syndrome, the key is capturing your symtoms while you are on a monitor to try and correlate the symptoms with an arrhythmia.  If a sudden onset tachycardia correlates with symptoms, there is often a good treatment available.

The same is rue for VT, RVOT VT, Long QT, Brugada -- these are all based on EKG findings as well as monitor data.  If you have symptoms while on a monitor and you have sudden onset tachycardia, it is easier to establish a diagnosis.  It is harder when  you don't have symptoms while wearing the monitor.  If you have a normal EKG, the diagnosis is in catching a arrhythmia recording during your symptoms.  If the holter doesnt do it, event monitors or continuous monitors may help.

Good luck and thanks for postihg.
Member Comments (6)

by EchoTech, Feb 13, 2007 12:00AM
Perhaps you could express your concerns to your doctor and tell him you want we call in my hospital a King of Hearts monitor.  It may go by other names where you are at, but the basic concept is that you wear a monitor about the size of a pager that has two leads on your chest.  You wear it for a month or so, and any time that you have what you consider a major event, you press a button on the monitor.  The monitor then records the previous 90 seconds before you pressed the record button.  Then depending where you are at, you can call the monitor stationing/hospital/doctor's office and they can tell you what it is I believe.  I am not real strong in the arrhythmia monitoring department, so you'll have to take what I say with a grain of salt.  That is it in a nutshell.  

I would doubt that an abnormal rhythm would be missed on four different EKGs, but ohterwise I really can't help you out.

Good night and good luck.

by mnharleyman, Feb 13, 2007 12:00AM
I too have had some of these same symptoms. I chalk it up to nerves and anxiety issues. However I think in some case it may be meds as well? I found that Bio-feed back has helped in most of the issues I have had with palpitations, fluttering. Really strange how the mind works with the body.

by LukeL, Feb 13, 2007 12:00AM
I know anxiety is a culprit because I was thinking about how long it had been since an attack, along with reliving some triggers that caused my first attack (even eating or seeing a certain food or article of clothing can do this for me) But it is hard to accept anxiety is 100% to blame.

by honeyb2, Feb 18, 2007 12:00AM
my first time here.  i have been reading some of the comments.  they are like you are all discribing me.  espically the anxiety. i did have ablasion in 04 for a-fib.  and it seemed to work well but this past yr i have started to have the pvcs once in a while but now they are everyday, sometimes all day.  i hate it.  you can not get away from it.  i want a reason but of course there is none.  i made my dr do blood work because i read the low potassioum can cause pvc but i was fine. i did not know they could do ablasion for pvcs.  my dr has not said anything about that.  he did ask if i wanted to go on "mexitin" but i do not like taking any thing new unles i have looked in to it.  has anyone taken that med? thank you

by mdd, Feb 25, 2007 12:00AM
hi mnharleyman, could you plz tell me more about the bio-feedback to stop palpitations? This is driving me nuts. I have had my ECG done and everything checks out okay. Every now and then (once a week or so) I feel my heart pounding but not beeting faster, just beating harder. I am looking for ways to stop it.
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