I'm a marathoner and 1/2 Ironman triathlete and I have recently had some problems with my breathing. Diagnosed as exercise induced asthma. Also had an exercise stress test and pcp told me that my tolerance to exercise was great but my
EKGAtrioventricular block, ekg tracing
Ecg
Exercise stress test was, in a word, crappy. Scheduled to see a heart specialist as a result. I've been told by a number of educated friends that an abnormal
stress test is fairly
commonCommon cold for people that are fit. Looking for more information to at least help put my mind at ease prior to heading to the heart docs. Can anyone confirm that fit people are very apt to have bummer stress tests.
Thanks,
Steve
-Arthur
So, I guess EKG's can be wrong.
If the heartbeat problems begin before you have trouble breathing, it may not be an exercise induced asthma but rather that the heart is not pumping enough O2 due to irregularities in heartbeats.
It's a good thing you'll see doctor for more testing.
-jeff
Based on the intuition of my savvy sportsmedicine oriented GP from whom I was trying to get a "better inhaler", I saw a cardiologist. He prescribed an angiogram that found a 90% blockage of the LAD that required CABG to "fix". 18 months later, I am back to my old performance level without the shortness of breath and few PVCs. The cardio claimed he ordered the angiogram based on my concern about the PVCs, but I am skeptical. He did say that the reason I was in general not symptomatic for the blockage was that my extensive collaterals would dilate and take over but may not have been available immediately when I started to run. I guess I didn't have a problem in cycling because I would typically ride the first few miles at a lower effort allowing the collaterals to dilate before serious exertion began.
I hope that your situation is different from mine. I think the big distinction is that my shortness of breath was immediate and then resolved with exercise. Exercise induces asthma I think would be the reverse, being OK at the start and then coming on with exercise. Good luck.
Tom
I also know this guy in my running club who was running a marathon - dropped at the 24 mile mark due to dizzyness - he came out of it - finished the race - in 'qualifying' time for the Boston Marathon !!! A week later he had the same dizzy episode and went to the ER and ended up with 2 stents and an ICD.. They said one artery was 97% blocked !!! Its amazing how strong the heart is and what its capable of doing.
Biking looks like so much FUN. I thought about trying it - but I've got this running craze !!! I should try a duathlon..
Konopka1955
Just looking for all the info I can get.
Thank you all for your previous posts.
STeve
-Arthur
I had an interesting/scary event yesterday... I went to the doctor for a physical and after he told me he heard a murmur in my heart he did an EKG. The readings were very bad. So I was rush to a cardiologist (to one of the best centers in the country, in Redwood City, CA) the same day. They did a threadmill test together with multiple ultrasounds, where they could see pictures of my heart. Pretty neat to watch the valves of your heart opening an closing, and also to hear the sound of your blood flowing through your veins.
The cardiologist told everything was perfect!!, and the reason why my EKG was bad was because, on slim/fit people like myself the old EKG machine my doctor had was picking up the electrical signal of my heart too strong! He also did not mentioned a murmur.
OK I'm happy I won't cancel my usual 5-6 hour mountain bike ride this Saturday. :)
I had an interesting/scary event yesterday... I went to the doctor for a physical and after he told me he heard a murmur in my heart he did an EKG. The readings were very bad. So I was rush to a cardiologist (to one of the best centers in the country, in Redwood City, CA) the same day. They did a threadmill test together with multiple ultrasounds, where they could see pictures of my heart. Pretty neat to watch the valves of your heart opening an closing, and also to hear the sound of your blood flowing through your veins.
The cardiologist told everything was perfect!!, and the reason why my EKG was bad was because, on slim/fit people like myself the old EKG machine my doctor had was picking up the electrical signal of my heart too strong! He also did not mentioned a murmur.
OK I'm happy I won't cancel my usual 5-6 hour mountain bike ride this Saturday. :)