Hi! I'm a 27 year old
femaleCondoms
Female condoms
Female sexual dysfunction, nonsmoker, no drug use. As a child I had numerous episodes of
syncopeFainting. Diagnosed with neurocardiogenic sycope. Then two years ago, out of the blue, I began having
tachycardiaArrhythmias
Multifocal atrial tachycardia
Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (psvt)
Sick sinus syndrome
Ventricular tachycardia with a resting rate in the 180's, standing rate 200's. I was in Mass General for 4 months trying every beta blocker with no success. I was diagnosed with POTS and finally, based on research, I was started on
ritalinRitalin
Ritalin la
Ritalin-sr which brought my
pulseNeck pulse
Pulse
Pulse - bounding
Pulse - weak or absent
Radial pulse
Takayasu arteritis
Taking your carotid pulse down immediately to the 110-120 range and I was discharged 2 days later. I also take high doses of
florinefFlorinef acetate (.5 mg BID) and procrit. I did well on this combo until this past October when I began having NSVT, seizures, chest pain. They say that the seizures were from decrease blood flow to the brain. My pulse has also increased a bit to resting rate 120's, standing rate 160's. The echos showed an EF of 40 (previous EF of 65 last August). It also showed an enlarged left ventricle.
My questions are:
1. If I am on the best combo of meds for the POTS, yet have still managed to have a decrease in heart function, how do I keep it from progressing?
2. I keep being told that tachycardia induced cardiomyopathy is easily treated, but my docs (now care at Beth Israel Deaconess in Boston) feel stymied by the situation because the tachycardia is dysautonomic and most frequently sinus. Can this type of cardiomyopathy be treated when it's dysautonomic and not electrical in nature?
3. Diagnostically, all that's been done are numerous tilt tables because the rythm is 99% sinus. Are other tests recommended.
Thank you so much! Bethany
Hia, I'm early 30's and was also treated for over 6 months with Sinus Tachy (180's at rest) and a dilated cardiomyopathy. Despite my asking twice they insisted the Tachy was a sympton of the DCM and not the cause because it was Sinus.
At the eleventh hour as I was due to have a pacemaker (so they could increase the beta blockers to control the tachy) they discovered I had Atrial Tachy and NOT sinus afterall. I had an ablation which cured it and fingers crossed my DCM is now improving.
The point is you MUST go back and ask for a full EP study to rule out atrial or other Tachy as opposed to Sinus, my hospital was one of the most respected heart units in the country and my Cardiologist was respected in his field too and yet they STILL missed it!
Go back!
I have had your symptoms in a lesser form for years. Mine was caused by the thyroid. This may be an over-simplified question because one assumes that the doctors start with the simplest possible solution first but, have they checked your thyroid levels?
Also, could you remind me what ablation is?
Thanks and good luck,
TQ