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Skipped Beats w/ Light-Headedness After WPW Ablation

I am 27 years old and had an ablation done because I was diagnosed w/ WPW this past summer.  I had a form of tachycardia where I'd get runs of fast beats every so often, but it wasn't that frequent (nevertheless scary).  I had the procedure done in Jun-06 b/c I was told there was a small chance that people w/ WPW could die suddenly.  I didn't know that after the ablation I'd end up with a different, more unnerving problem.

I now have what I believe are "skipped beats", where I can feel my heart flutter in my chest, sometimes followed by a feeling of light-headedness (not sure why?).  This has been a problem since the ablation, and now, 10 mos. later, I'm having the skipped beats even more often.  At first I noticed it mostly during the cool-down period post exercise, but it also happened while inactive.  The post-exercise skipped beats remain today, but occurrences while inactive increased dramatically in the last few days from 3-5 a week to about 1x every couple mins.

I had an event monitor for a mo. previously & did a stress test (of course the skipped beats didn't happen during/after the test at all), and my EP says everything is "normal" and the skipped beats were "normal".  They weren't "normal" for me...I never had them before!

I've since worn a halter monitor for 24 hr. constant monitoring, & later another event monitor for a mo., with results yet to be heard.  Other than a few episodes, I don't predict them seeing anything other than what they consider "normal".  I was hoping they would subside w/ time, but I'm now getting more skipped beats than ever, immediately after I returned the monitor!  I'm not an emotional person, but any time you feel your heart beat irregularly it's not something you can just ignore like they tell you to, so it is an emotional challenge.

What options are there (if any) to decrease/eliminate the skipped beats I'm having post-ablation?  Also, why do I sometimes feel light-headed when they occur?  Is my BP dropping?
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329165 tn?1515471990
If you want to leave your email address, do it as follows (eg.):

bookert at yahoo dot com
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329165 tn?1515471990
I had Ablation done (Nov. 2007) to control PSVT (paramoxal supra ventrical tachycardia) and arrthythmias (extra systoles/miss beats) and after mapping and Ablation was done, I still get PSVT and arrthythmias.  The PSVT is scarry, but not dangerous and the extra systoles/miss beats is annoying, but also not dangerous.  Something some of us just have to live with.  I also get dizzy, tired and my throat feels as if it is closing.
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Avatar universal
thank you!! smiley2000, So from ur experience do u think that the ablation was worth it? (eg.***@****)
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Avatar universal
repn314 at yahoo.com lol sorry messed it up.
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Avatar universal
my heartbeat isnt even really that fast on average its abt 65 or 68 bpm and every so often it might go up to 75 bpm. It kinda scares me though when im hearing of people who has this condition and their heart races to over 200 bpm
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329165 tn?1515471990
60-80 bpm in sinus rhythm is completely normal.  100 and above is seen as Tachycardia.  My normal heartrate is 80-90 and when I get PSVT "attacks" it races to 180 and then I stress it into 200!

In my case the Ablation did not work, because the Electro-Cardiologist could not fix the entire problem.  A normal person has 1 sinus node, I had 3 and he was able to Ablate only the 1.  I still have 1 extra node and my normal sinus node.  If I want him to fix my arrthythmia problem, I must get pacemaker implant and I am not going to do that.  I am 32 years old.
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