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Thanks and have a great new year.
Karen
As Sunshine47 said, the Beta Blockers decrease the Heart Rate. During a recent Cardiolite Stress Test, the technician told me that my target was 175 beats per minute. I just laughed. After going for several minutes, and my legs (not my heart) ready to give out, likely from the lack of oxygen since my heart was not up to speed, my heart rate was only 125 beats per minute. I quite the test shortly after, though I had managed to out pace my PVCs. I take 50mg Atenolol in the morning, and 25mg at night.
Anyway, I also had a swallowing induced component to my arrhythmia, and had read that several people worked past this problem by losing weight. But how, with a slow heart beat?
Diet. Not some ludicrous fad Diet, just a significant reduction in the volume of food that I ate. It worked, I lost about 30 pounds, eating just one meal (no seconds) in the evening, predetermined snacks (a few cookies, not the box), and just did so day after day. And watch the drinks. An average serving of many drinks is 8 ounces, and in a 16 ounce drink you need to multiple the calories by 2. You can still drink such things, but I got in the habit of dumping about half of it out, otherwise tried to use low/no calorie drinks.
Strangely, it did not seem to help the swallowing induced arrhythmia. During that time, I read that Anorexics suffered a form of arrhythmia from not eating. Usually, and most of my working life, I would go the entire day without eating, eating far too much in the evening. I changed this to eating 1/2 of a peanut butter sandwich for breakfast, a small granola or similar snack at lunch, and a single helping of food for dinner. Eventually, the swallowing induced arrhythmia went away.
Happy New Year and wishes of great health for you and yours.