I definitely experienced the dry mouth and urinary retention when i took the Norpace (and it didn't help my arrhythmia, so i was happy to get off it!). The cardiologists i deal with (all men) laughed with me, and said they just wanted me to know what it feels like to deal with a prostate problem (i know, i'm female...they were trying to be funny).
The doc brings up a very valid point. I hope you are going somewhere very reputable for your ablation, and i would talk to the EP about what he is planning to do BEFORE he ablates anything. a full EP study, where they map around the heart and try to find the location of the arrhythmia (accessory pathway, possibly) is a more thorough approach than just assuming a standard A-fib origin around the pulmonary veins and attacking that way. I needed a repeat procedure for my arrhythmia (a swallowing-induced tachycardia), and i was awake for both procedures. I remember coming back for the 2nd one and getting very annoyed with the EP for mapping around in my right atrium, when we had "clearly" determined on the previous study that everything was coming from the left side (when you are awake on the table for 9+ hours, the attitude becomes "can we just get on with this already???"). I now appreciate that he was just being VERY thorough and making sure nothing had changed in the 6 months since the first procedure, and now that i am arrhythmia-free, i am very thankful for his approach.
Good luck, and let us know how you make out.
steph
My question is, is anyone else out there taking extended-release disopyramide?
The side effects you describe are common for dysopyrimide.
If so, what kinds of side effects have you experienced?
I will leave this to the people who take the medications to answer it.
I want to mention that many young people with atrial fibrillation have accessory pathways -- areas of conduction from the atrium to the ventricular myocardium without passing through the AV node. It is important to do a full EP study before an atrial fibrillation ablation because if an accessory pathway is found, it might be easier to ablate the accessory pathway and with lower risks than an atrial fibrillation ablation. Even if the accessory pathway is not visible on the EKG, it can conduct only in one direction -- from the ventricle to the atrium.
I hope this answers your question and is useful to you. good luck with your ablation.