39 y/o
femaleCondoms
Female condoms
Female sexual dysfunction, told I had
SVTParoxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (psvt) due to an episode while sitting at work and not to worry about it. A couple of months later I had another episode while taking a cycling class - HR monitor showed that it climbed from 160 to 190 - but did recover on its own. Cardiologist indicated on the stress test that HR appeared to be on the fast side but thinks it's probably due to deconditioning, which I think is odd.
While I'm a few pounds overweight, I have been a
regularRegular insulin exerciser (and former aerobics instructor) for ten years and I still exercise 4-6x/week at a pretty high intensity (generally below HR=165) and my HR does recover pretty quickly when I do work out.
Since I do have a problem with anxiety/panic - treated with
WellbutrinWellbutrin
Wellbutrin sr
Wellbutrin xl - I don't want to jump to conclusions but am concerned that this problem has suddenly appeared, been duplicated on the stress test, and categorized as deconditioning when I do actually exercise a lot. I've stopped exercising intensely until it's solved, and it's getting a
littleLittle noses decongestant
Little tummys boring!
Thanks in
advanceAdvance care plus
Advance relief for any advice.
If you don't mind. What anxiety med?
My husband has severe anxiety over the chest pains and jaw and arms pains he has been having with no apparent solution. (tests thus far have been clear).
He is 33, but because of family history and high bp, cholestorol he is constantly worried.
Tried both zoloft and cymbalta and within days he was MUCH worse. Was on Xanax for a while, (low dose XR) but he didn't want to get addicted. It helped, but didn't solve things.
Just wondering what med is working for you?
Thanks.
Erik
Unfortunately he also tried Buspar but got dizzy almost immediately and a bit sick to his stomach.
Oh well... we will keep searching.
In some ways I give him credit.
He is in anxiety hell right now, it comes and goes and it comes and goes when he gets jaw/upper chest pain primarily. Though he wakes up shaking sometimes and denies it.
He was on .5 xanax XR for 5 months, it helped but he is very worried about becoming addicted or just needing it.
So, he weened himself off of it. Had about 2 really good weeks after it was out of his system, then the physical symptoms came back... which ramp the anxiety up. He doesn't want to die (who does?) My brother died at an early age due to sudden cardiac death, and while no, that isn't his genetics he is so worried of leaving me and the kids. That and last year his life was very strenous and it hit him afterwords.
I'm really hoping this is all anxiety, and it seems to be as his thallium stress was negative, as was his 64 slice CT of the heart. Unfortunately he is about 20 lbs overweight (works on it though) has high cholesterol (260, 175 ldl) and can't take statins. His BP is high also, and he is in a high stress job.
He exercises regularly, never smokes, hardly drinks anymore also. Sometimes he is afraid to exercise with the anxiety/physical stuff. But he generally feels better after that.
It's tough on both of us. Sorry to go on and on in this forum.
Of course, another approach is light on the drugs, and heavier on cognitive or talk therapy. One approach may be better for a particular patient than another.
Often, well-meaning GPs undertake this kind of thing, but the fact is that it's really rather specialized, and if the doc's attention is divided by people with measles, colds, bad cuts, and back injuries, he/she won't have much opportunity to spend on psych followup.