Thanks as always for this wonderful service. I'm back on an event monitor because I began having runs of skipped and fast beats around the clock WHILE ON BETA BLOCKERS. I took them for a month and was so fatigue I thought I was going to croak. The dosage was reduced ( i was still having some palps). don't know if that had anything to do with it but I have never in my life had such awful palps, so my doc ordered another event monitor(had one in June showing many PACs, few pvcs,non-sustained PSVT for a few seconds and lots of sinus tach just standing up or doing anything).Had a
normalNormal saline flush thalliumThallium and sestamibi stress tests stress a year ago. questions:
1. all i know is my internist took a peek and said i was having some
atrialAtrial fibrillation/flutter
Atrial myxoma
Left atrial myxoma
Right atrial myxoma runs ( cardiologist is on
vacationVacation health care)what are
atrialAtrial fibrillation/flutter
Atrial myxoma
Left atrial myxoma
Right atrial myxoma runs? I hear runs of fast beats when I send my events via the phone.. those are the ones i correlate with feeling really bad.. they are 3 to 30
rapidRapid shallow breathing beats in a row like you turned on a switch. they start and stop suddenly.
2. I feel my heart skipping a bit when I exercise and afterwards for a minute or two.. I've heard different things -- dangerous or not? of course, on a stress test not one skip.
3. my cardiologist doesn't think an ep is warranted based on last monitor of non-sustained PSVT, etc. what DOES usually warrant an EP study. I WANT TO GET THIS PROBLEM FIXED! tired of it after 20 years.
4.theoretically, could being on metoprolol for one month and stopping altogether have caused me to be extra sensitive to adrenaline and have horrible palps for a while? they started calming down after about a week to 10 days.
Beta blockers made my palpitations worse too.
By the way - you know what they say - "if you don't like what your doctor says - change your doctor"!
Best Wishes, Linda
Thanks so much for your time.
L
Best Wishes
You should work with your doctor to come to a satisfactory conclusion. There are certain things an EP study will not help with.
An EP study is an invasive procedure that defines the electrical anatomy of the heart. Once areas are defined to be abnormal, subsequent procedures are done (like radio frequency ablation) to fix the 'faulty wiring'. An EP study in itself is not curative. Before having an EP study, there needs to be some evidence that the wiring is abnormal. This would be determined by your event monitor. If it shows an abnormal wiring connection, or other rhythm problems that are ammenable to ablation then an EP study is warrented.
I'm a very big patient advocate but demanding a procedure is not the solution (Linda, I'm sorry to hear about your ordeal). You should approach your relationship with your doctor as a team, if the answers you are recieving from your doctor are not reassuring or satisfactory, seek a second opinion.
Thanks.
I hope this helps.
My cardiologist said ( about my last month long event monitor results) , and I quote, " there is no suggestion of a fib at all and we don't see any signs of a reentry tachycardia. In fact, I ran by one of the PSVT rhythm strips to Dr.___, (an EP) for another opinion and the more we look at it the more it looks like sinus tachycardia. You do have a lot of sinus tachycardia and a lot of PACs and rare PVCs."
BUT how on earth can an even monitor show things like reentry tachy? maybe the best question, in hopes you can answer this, is CAN it show if a rhythm is reentry or not?
and one more -- if you can please answer -- isn't it true that sinus tach does NOT come on and stop abruptly? there's a "warm up" phase? so runs of 3 to 30 fast beats that start and stop suddenly couldn't be sinus tach? or could they?
Thanks so much.
thanks again for "listening" and answering so many questions.
I have wondered since if doctors leave patients to make the decisions because of the "compensation culture" that exists nowadays. I would say if this is so it is very understandable.
Hope this explains.
Best Wishes.
You guys seem to be old hats at this heart game. Can you give me any advice on how to deal with life as all this goes on? I'm 20, female and been having problems with sinus tachycardia for about 1 year. I get sudden onset of tachycardia at 150-170 bpm which last from 1-3 days (basically until I finally break down and go to the ER). This happens everyday to every third/fourth day. Needless to say, I'm sick of this. I had endless echos done, (all ok, slight murmur), EKG's, monitors and hosital stays. It seems that my natural pacemaker doesn't regulate very well and goes too fast at times. I can't take beta blockers due to a genetic oversensitiveity to them. Now it seems to me, that the smart thing to do is zap out my natural pacemaker and give me a new one. This is my GP's idea but he can't find a cardiologist to agree with him. In the meantime, how do I keep from going insane? I can't excersize, go anywhere alone and once almost died b/c I passed out in the shower. I can only take two classes at college b/c I miss so much. I've even been in the hospital b/c the meds made my heart rate get too low. Its hard to keep going whe I don't see much hope in the horizon.
thanks, Bernadette