Hi, I have had a mild
idiopathicBell's palsy
Fibrous dysplasia
Guillain-barre syndrome
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Idiopathic aplastic anemia
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
Orbital pseudotumor
Pseudotumor cerebri dilatedDilated cardiomyopathy cardiomyopathy for the past 4 years, and take 20mg.
vasotec twiceTwice-a-day a day. I am a 35 year old male in otherwise good health, the heart size and
valvesHeart valves
Heart valves - anterior view
Heart valves - superior view are
normalNormal saline flush,I am thank god asymptomatic and feel fine. I have mentioned to my doctor that once or twice in the last few months i have woken up in the middle of the night with a pressure (fullness not pain) in my chest and a rapid pounding heartbeat which lasts for about 20 minutes. He feels it might be GERD as I do have acid reflux, however to be safe and to rule out the heart first, he has fitted me for an event monitor, and scheduled a sestamibi stress test. My question is: is a stress test a logical first step? I have a relative with cardiomyopathy who said his cardiologist did a catheterization as soon as he was diagnosed with myopathy. My doctor did a stress test at that time I was diagnosed which was fine, and a PET scan which showed no abnormalities of coronary flow reserve. (He did this test because i'm a nervous fellow and he wanted to reassure me) My doctor states that he doesn't believe in routinely jumping to an angiogram which carries some risk, and upon his clinical evaluation and treatment of me he doesn't feel i need one. I like and trust my doctor. Is the testing for cardiomyopathy standard and clear cut, or do cardiologists have differing opinions as to the need for an angiogram? Also, is a sestamibi stress test if negative, a fairly reliable indicator of absence of heart disease?(i know its not the gold standard).
excerised induced palps. from my understanding could be dangerous. You should have a stress test. Im doctor but i sure would be safe about this.