I am 53, 6' 2'' tall, 230 pounds. During a routine physical exam, I was directed to a cardiologist because I have always had what was considered a heart murmur. In the course of the cardiologist's exam, he determined that I have an aorta whose enlargemt has increased since eight years ago when it was last measured, and a bicuspid valve. By wearing a heart monitor for a day, it was also discovered that my heart regularly goes into lengthy periods of fibrillation, and was in fact beating irregularly for the entire day I wore the monitor.
Right now, I am taking 100 mg daily of a beta blocker and one regular-dose aspirin per day. I have been doing this for about a month, and I regularly take my pulse to see if my heart is beating regularly. It goes into an irregular rhythm for about 24 hours every fourth day.
Until this exam and its findings, I felt fine and had no symptoms of a heart problem or problems. Now I worry when my heart is not beating regularly. Whether it is beating regularly or not, I feel that I become tired more easily, and I avoid physical activity which I think might overtax my heart. My overall health has gone from what I considered to be good to generally feeling bad.
I am wondering if there is an alternative to what appears to be on the horizon: increasing doses of medication and eventual surgery with even more medication prescribed after that. I got a second opinion which generally concurred with my cardiologist's, and have acquiesced with the medical process so far. But I also feel that the process, more than anything else, has made me feel unwell, or alerted me that I should feel unwell.
And I do not see a corner ahead around which I can turn to put this Pandora's Box of symptoms behind me. In particular, I wonder if I have had this group of asymptomatic physical characteristics for my entire life, and am now being treated because they happened to be discovered, and if the treatment is necessary.