I've had benign PVCs my entire life from very early childhood. After years of struggling against real obsession regarding them (and high level cardiological exams at major hospitals plus event monitors, etc.), I finally deduced that these PVCs are directly associated with my gastrointestinal tract. I discovered the causative link to the vagus nerve while doing research last year. I'm not a physician but I can tell you this much: If an individual has had a thorough examination (this might include, among other things, a stress echo which I have periodically) and no diagnosis of heart disease is found, the single biggest favor one can do for oneself is to STOP OBSESSING. The more anxious you become, the worse the PVCs will be and the greater your GI discomfort will become. I've discovered that a simple OTC like Gas-Ex can do WONDERS. I prefer the chewable variety. One or two will ease gastritis or irritated stomach and your PVCs will stop. If you're having an especially bad day (as I was yesterday because something I ate really upset my GI tract), be careful of your food intake. Stay away from gas producing foods and heavy meals; eat several small bland meals throughout the day. Whatever is causing your GI problems will PASS (pun intended) eventually. PVCs in a healthy heart are totally benign. Do something relaxing, watch your diet for a few days, and stop worrying.
I have experienced my heart beating what feels like harder but not faster. This has happened when I woke up from a dream or sometime while playing a game on the computer. Is this normal with NCS-Neurocardiogenic Syncope? Has anyone else experienced this with a fainting disorder. Also has anyone else felt like their mind spaced out or became foggy? Some people from the VVS group on yahoo have. I was just wondering if this could be normal with this type of fainting disorder.
try afibbers.com. It has a great message board going, lots of great advice and compassionate people.
thats what i think...do you have them? what do you describe the sensation to be... its driving me crazy..
hope all is well with all today
Yes I do. Aren't you the one who wrote the coment on pvc's in February?Did you get that from someone else or did you write it?
Do you think you are just having pvc's?
hey i have had a terrible night.been up since 1 am ints 530 now.took my atenolol before bed heart been not racy but like fluter or tapping sensations tonite..wierd..hasnt been this bad for aloing time.. i feel fainty alot also..pulse seem fine..blood preasure was borderline high for a hr earlier in the night..just i guess one of those night..
hope u get feeling good
dave
Hi I have this also and have for a long time. I have tried many medications and different treatments. The thing I found that helps me the most is midodrine. Drink tonz of water, more than you ever would normally. I have worse symptoms when under emotional stress, and standing for long periods of time. When you start to feel the head pressure, sit or lay down before you pass out and after a while you learn to have better control. Good luck, if you do find things that help you, let me know, I would be interested in trying them.
hey..doing somewhat better now..took a 20 min power nap..still feeling like buzzing sensation in left breat/chest area..take pulse and its good.oh well we are blessed i guess to feel everything in are body..hope you have a great day..feel free to email ***@**** anytime you need.. oh now my neck hurts from the way i took a power nap..there we go..worry worry worry..
dave
all heart tests came back ok
got it from someone else in another health forum..
thanks
dave
still not doing great but alive so thats good!!
Hope you are feeling better. When I have them I feel the extra beat then the pause then the thud. I have them all the time sometimes only worse. Sometimes they jolt my upper stomach. I feel it in my eyes sometimes. My heart, at times, or my throat, it jumps around.I have been told that I worry too much. I can't help but pay attention to it. If you are feeling fainty you should probably go to the hospitoal or at least call your Dr.The other morning before I got up I felt it start skipping around it went into some kind of tachycardia. I told my teenage daughter I can't breath and my heart is beating fast. When it finally wore off she basically laughed at me.Everyone thinks I panic too easy.But I try to figure everything out. Why did this happen what did I do different. DoI need to drag someone with me to Walmart in case I have one?I use to be somewhat agoraphobic because of weird heart things and panic and the what ifs. I don't want to start that again.
I nearly passed out twice a few months ago, also ended up on Toprol and switched to Nadolol because of horrible nightmares. But with my near fainting, I felt there WAS a cardiac component - like a buzzing in my chest and I felt no pulse when I tried. Did you have any heart symptoms that you were aware of?
Best,
Jennifer
Hi Ohioan,
As I am sure you realize now, this is a very difficult problem to treat and regimens are individualized for each case. Even with careful follow up, the success is variable. Some people recover completely, others recover with occassional relapses, and still others do not find much that helps.
1. Am I going to have to deal with this forever?
Only time can answer that question. If the metoprolol does not help, other medications that may help include selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, fludrocortisone, midodrine, theophylline, disopyramide, scopolamine, and hyoscyamine. A side from medication, a high salt diet and staying well hydrated may help.
2. Does lorazepam affect the chemicals in the brain to cause this?
Lorazepam is not causing these events and does not cause perminant neurochemical changes. It is possible the reason you take the lorzepam, anxiety, is playing a role. That is why some selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (paxil, zoloft, prozac) help.
If you live near Cleveland, Dr. Jager or Dr. Fouad may be able to help.
I hope you get back to normal soon, but it is difficult to predict the course. Good luck and I hope this helps.