>It has been quite refreshing for me to find out that i am not >the only person in this world with concernes and questions >about heart condition.
Well, I feel just about the same
>Tow yeaers ago i was taken to the hospital with what seemed to .be a heart atack. I was 37 at the time.
It also happened to me last week and I am also 37.
> After lots of tests i was given the clear for heart atack and >angine. However to this day no the doctors can't tell me waht >the problem was.
That
It has been quite refreshing for me to find out that i am not the only person in this world with concernes and questions about heart condition. Tow yeaers ago i was taken to the hospital with what seemed to be a heart atack. I was 37 at the time. After lots of tests i was given the clear for heart atack and angine. However to this day no the doctors can't tell me waht the problem was. I am taking atenalol and it has controled svt. Waht concernes me the most is the chest pain, waking a midle of the night as if the life is runing out of me, pain in the back of my legs etc. etc. I have discussed this with my cardilogist and he thinks that thre isen't any othr issue with my heart it is only a relatively benign SVT and that i spent too much time on the internet looking at heart problems, so he does not consider any further tests. Is anyone out there with a svt that has similar symptomes, do you know anyone? I would love to hear from you.
You are asking if exercise can increase the forcefulness of heart contractions and if an incomplete right bundle branch block may affect heart contractions?
The more one exercises the more one's own body becomes conditioned and the lower the heart rate at rest. This does not have a direct affect on the heart's contractility. An individual who is extremely fit may develop the characteristics of an atheletic heart where there is a mild increase in heart muscle. This should not cause the heart to contract more vigorously during rest and less so during exercise. The symptoms you are describing sound like palpitations, which is the awareness of one's heart beat.It is likely that during rest you are more aware of heart's contraction than during exercise. If these symptoms are increasingly bothersome it may be a good idea to discuss them with your doctor so that any problems with the heart's rhythm may be evaluated.
The incomplete right bundle branch block or sinus rhythm is unrelated to these symptoms.
You also report that it takes longer for you to reach your maximum heart rate of 180. This may be a sign of physical conditioning. Those of us who are not conditioned reach our maximum predicted heart rate quite rapidly. Those of us who are conditioned may take a little longer to reach the maximum predicted heart rate. (Exluding the use of medications which slow the heart rate.)
Thanks for your questions
CCF-MD-KE