Harrowing Experience - Update On Palpitations
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Originally Posted by readmore
Looks like your experience was nearly the same as mine. I think I may have been mistaken to call mine "atrial" tachycardia though. Apparently tachycardia can affect different areas of the heart. My doctor said some are more dangerous than others, so I don't want to give the wrong impression as to which kind I had.
https://www.mindwheels.com/ED-WEB%20Web/SVT.htm
Originally Posted by readmore
I haven't had any more episodes since the procedure. If I drink about six cups of coffee I get a twinge, but that's all. How about you?
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Dnvr,
Just read you original post today and I'm glad to hear you're doing better. Heart problems can be very scary, I know, I'm 5 weeks post-op mitral valve repair and one of the complications after this type of surgery can be A-fib. Developing A-fib was one of the things that had me terrified before the operation. Fortunately, this never occurred and my recovery is going well ecept for an occasional cough which hurts like hell in the incision area. You mentioned a HR of 155 - was that resting? I'm a little stressed because mine is in the 80's (resting 40's before surgery). I hope you're able to get that down. I was wondering why they have you on blood thinners, but then I guess it's to prevent the clotting. Since my valve was repaired and not replaced, I was able to avoid the whole blood thinner thing. Very happy about that!! Good to see you're still riding the bike though. Doctors told me 6 weeks and only then on the trainer. Probably have to wait another few weeks before attempting the road - don't want to fall on the sternum. Again, congratulations on your improvement! Take care.
Just read you original post today and I'm glad to hear you're doing better. Heart problems can be very scary, I know, I'm 5 weeks post-op mitral valve repair and one of the complications after this type of surgery can be A-fib. Developing A-fib was one of the things that had me terrified before the operation. Fortunately, this never occurred and my recovery is going well ecept for an occasional cough which hurts like hell in the incision area. You mentioned a HR of 155 - was that resting? I'm a little stressed because mine is in the 80's (resting 40's before surgery). I hope you're able to get that down. I was wondering why they have you on blood thinners, but then I guess it's to prevent the clotting. Since my valve was repaired and not replaced, I was able to avoid the whole blood thinner thing. Very happy about that!! Good to see you're still riding the bike though. Doctors told me 6 weeks and only then on the trainer. Probably have to wait another few weeks before attempting the road - don't want to fall on the sternum. Again, congratulations on your improvement! Take care.
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Originally Posted by LCI_Brian
SVT (supraventricular tachycardia) is a generic term to indicate a tachycardia that originates above the ventricles. I had AV nodal reentry tachycardia, which is the most common and I believe less dangerous than others, but still annoying and uncomfortable. One type of SVT is called "atrial" tachycardia:
https://www.mindwheels.com/ED-WEB%20Web/SVT.htm
Same here, at worst I get a twinge, and I'd have to have a lot of caffeine and add a little stress at work to even do that. I had the ablation a few weeks ago, so maybe I still need to give it a little time. But I can push a heart rate of 190 on the bike (I'm 37 y.o.) and not even get a twinge.
https://www.mindwheels.com/ED-WEB%20Web/SVT.htm
Same here, at worst I get a twinge, and I'd have to have a lot of caffeine and add a little stress at work to even do that. I had the ablation a few weeks ago, so maybe I still need to give it a little time. But I can push a heart rate of 190 on the bike (I'm 37 y.o.) and not even get a twinge.
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Originally Posted by hjbiker43
You mentioned a HR of 155 - was that resting?
Even one month later, when I finally got to see a Kaiser MD and they then sent me in an ambulance to a hospital, the reason they sent me was because my resting pulse was way too high. They put me on drugs to slow the heart, and would not rrelease me until it was below 100 bpm.
Right now, after the ablation, it is running about 70-75. Before the ablation it was 59. I have been told it will take about a year until it gets back down to about 59.
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As of today, I am off of all prescribed medications associated with the Atrial Fibrillation.
I will be taking one adult aspirin daily.
My heart remains in Normal Sinus Rhythm
I will be taking one adult aspirin daily.
My heart remains in Normal Sinus Rhythm
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A big CONGRATS Dnvr......come a long way from the discouraging days before the procedure to the hassles of traveling here to CA, to the doc not finding the veins, etc. etc.
Probably should go down to your workout room, turn on your most bodacious Spinerval and some WWII action, and really blow out the pipes!
Probably should go down to your workout room, turn on your most bodacious Spinerval and some WWII action, and really blow out the pipes!
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Originally Posted by GrannyGear
A big CONGRATS Dnvr......come a long way from the discouraging days before the procedure to the hassles of traveling here to CA, to the doc not finding the veins, etc. etc.
Probably should go down to your workout room, turn on your most bodacious Spinerval and some WWII action, and really blow out the pipes!
Probably should go down to your workout room, turn on your most bodacious Spinerval and some WWII action, and really blow out the pipes!
I was a heretic today and went on a 5 mile walk instead of bicycling! Just liked the change.
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Originally Posted by DnvrFox
As of today, I am off of all prescribed medications associated with the Atrial Fibrillation.
I will be taking one adult aspirin daily.
My heart remains in Normal Sinus Rhythm
I will be taking one adult aspirin daily.
My heart remains in Normal Sinus Rhythm
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A Question Fox: I was not aware that a good friend of mine and superb athlete was suffering from AFIB. He is a triathlete, has won state cycling championships, and is the swimming coach of the Maddogs (world's largest triathlon club here in the St. Petersburg area). He telephoned me last night to tell me that he had had a pacemaker/defibrillator combination implanted in his chest. It is tweaked to limit is max heart rate to 130. He indicated that he had "silent" AFIB meaning he would not be aware that he was suffering an episode. I find that phenomenon difficult to understand in that when I suffered my two events, I was immediately aware of the rapid, irregular beats. I wonder why one would undergo the implantation procedure rather than look in to an ablation procedure such as yours? Any thoughts - I am going to visit him later in the afternoon.
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Originally Posted by skydive69
A Question Fox: I was not aware that a good friend of mine and superb athlete was suffering from AFIB. He is a triathlete, has won state cycling championships, and is the swimming coach of the Maddogs (world's largest triathlon club here in the St. Petersburg area). He telephoned me last night to tell me that he had had a pacemaker/defibrillator combination implanted in his chest. It is tweaked to limit is max heart rate to 130. He indicated that he had "silent" AFIB meaning he would not be aware that he was suffering an episode. I find that phenomenon difficult to understand in that when I suffered my two events, I was immediately aware of the rapid, irregular beats. I wonder why one would undergo the implantation procedure rather than look in to an ablation procedure such as yours? Any thoughts - I am going to visit him later in the afternoon.
Happens all the time.
Otherwise, there must be more to this than meets the eye.
I am still in NSR, and the AFib is out of sight and pretty much out of mind!
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Originally Posted by DnvrFox
Incompetent medical advice?
Happens all the time.
Otherwise, there must be more to this than meets the eye.
I am still in NSR, and the AFib is out of sight and pretty much out of mind!
Happens all the time.
Otherwise, there must be more to this than meets the eye.
I am still in NSR, and the AFib is out of sight and pretty much out of mind!
As an aside, I have always had little patience for those who find excuses not to exercise. I ride my trainer for 70 minutes every day with a broken neck which gives me even less patience than I had previously for those folks.
I guess I will get the complete story regarding my friend's situation when I visit him this afternoon.
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no, i don't believe it was from incompetent medical advise. not everyones afib is the same. i also had to have a pacemaker implated and have an av ablation. the ablation that denvr had would not have done a thing for me. along with afib i experanced tachycardia or very high heart rate. during exercise my bpm would go as high as 240. thats a little high for 62 at the time. perhaps in the future there will be other procedures to cure the problem. its been a year for me and have had zero problems and would advise someone to do the same if everything were the same. the only negative is i must still take a blood thinner, althou not as much as before the ablation.
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Skydive...........you are superhuman! Glad you are back. I didn't know about your injury so I wondered what had happened to you. Hope you can stick around. Best wishes on your recovery, but you seem to have even a broken neck in hand. Hearing about your 70 minutes makes me embarassed for days I weasel out.
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Originally Posted by dharleyd
no, i don't believe it was from incompetent medical advise. not everyones afib is the same. i also had to have a pacemaker implated and have an av ablation. the ablation that denvr had would not have done a thing for me. along with afib i experanced tachycardia or very high heart rate. during exercise my bpm would go as high as 240. thats a little high for 62 at the time. perhaps in the future there will be other procedures to cure the problem. its been a year for me and have had zero problems and would advise someone to do the same if everything were the same. the only negative is i must still take a blood thinner, althou not as much as before the ablation.
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Originally Posted by GrannyGear
Skydive...........you are superhuman! Glad you are back. I didn't know about your injury so I wondered what had happened to you. Hope you can stick around. Best wishes on your recovery, but you seem to have even a broken neck in hand. Hearing about your 70 minutes makes me embarassed for days I weasel out.
With all of that, last Sunday I was riding my trainer when I was just struck with the need to be on a real bicycle. I jumped off the trainer, put on my Bolle sunglasses and Giro helmet, and with stiff neck brace in place, I headed down the road. Although I did only 11.99 miles averaging 17.485 mph, and had to bend my eyeballs upwards as hard as I could to simply see down the road, it was an incredible freeing and exhilarating experience for me. The endorphins lasted for two days. I followed that performance mid week, and had the joy of hitting 31.1 mph in the park near my house. My son was quite mad at me for taking such a chance with a broken neck and opined that people must have thought I was someone who had escaped from the local mental institution!
It is true that I have been off of the forum. I have been struggling with bouts of depression dealing with this unfortunate turn in my life, and have just not had the inclination to deal with something in which I could not personally participate. I do intend to beat this, and I refuse to give up the goal of winning the National Senior Games time trials in Louisville in June of 2007!
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SkyDiver....another reason not to give in (to damned understandable) depression is that now you are a hero of will-power, discipline and sheer guts to all us FiftyPlus types. Just what you needed, huh....a bunch of gray headed guys at the finish sprint shouting "Allez".
Keep wired in here and keep us posted towards '07.
Keep wired in here and keep us posted towards '07.
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[QUOTE=skydive69] I, for example, broke my neck in a bicycle race (last October 30th trying to avoid an official who ran into my path). It is the rarest and most fatal (50% mortality rate) of spinal fractures - a fracture to the C1 cervical vertebra (also known as the atlas). QUOTE]
I pray for your complete recovery and good health.
I pray for your complete recovery and good health.
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Originally Posted by GrannyGear
SkyDiver....another reason not to give in (to damned understandable) depression is that now you are a hero of will-power, discipline and sheer guts to all us FiftyPlus types. Just what you needed, huh....a bunch of gray headed guys at the finish sprint shouting "Allez".
Keep wired in here and keep us posted towards '07.
Keep wired in here and keep us posted towards '07.
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[QUOTE=berts]
Thanks berts - I'll take it!
Originally Posted by skydive69
I, for example, broke my neck in a bicycle race (last October 30th trying to avoid an official who ran into my path). It is the rarest and most fatal (50% mortality rate) of spinal fractures - a fracture to the C1 cervical vertebra (also known as the atlas). QUOTE]
I pray for your complete recovery and good health.
I pray for your complete recovery and good health.
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Originally Posted by DnvrFox
skydive69
I sent you an email.
I sent you an email.
Thanks - I got it and have replied.
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Skydive69,
I have recently picked up a new book titled Bike for Life, How to Ride to 100, by Roy M. Wallack and Bill Katovsky (Marlowe & Company, New York, 2005, ISBN 1-56924-451-0). In it, they discuss a previously under estimated hazard to bicyclists, especially us older ones, called osteoproosis. Here are some quotes from Chapter 9, page 212:
Seeing this (there is a lot more discussion on the mechanism for bone loss in the book), and hearing you discuss the cervical vertebra which is not healing, I have to ask whether you have discussed your training with your doctor? If not, you might want to talk to him about it and be tested for this newly uncovered aspect of cycling contributing to osteoporosis. It could explain some of what's happening to you.
Good luck,
John
I have recently picked up a new book titled Bike for Life, How to Ride to 100, by Roy M. Wallack and Bill Katovsky (Marlowe & Company, New York, 2005, ISBN 1-56924-451-0). In it, they discuss a previously under estimated hazard to bicyclists, especially us older ones, called osteoproosis. Here are some quotes from Chapter 9, page 212:
Dr. Jeanne Nichols, PhD, a professor of ex.rcise andnutrition and a serious cyclist, was conducting bond density studies of veteran bike racers and endurance riders. Ultimately, she examined the bones of 27 Masters racers and endurance riders, like Penseyres and Templin, who had an average of age of 51.2 and trained an average 12.2 hourrs a week for 20 years. Her study, "Low Bone Mineral Density in Highly Trained Male Masters Cyclists," was published in the August 2003 issue of Osteoporosis International. And her conclusions, communicated in an article by this coauthor published in the March 2004 issue of Bicycling Magazine, would stun the bike world: Anyone who rides a bike as his or her main form of fitness is risking osteoporosis...
...In Nichols's study of 27 male riders, however, two-thirds showed at least "osteopenia," moderate bone loss. Four of those had severe bone thinning, or osteoporosis. The test group's average hip and spine bone densities were 10 percent lower than a control group of similar aged, moderately athletic noncycling men.
When I remarked to Nichols that 10 percent didn't seem like a big deal, she was agast.
"Clinically, 10 percent thinning is significant--not good--almost frightening," she said. "Because at age 50, average men have no bone loss at all..."
...In Nichols's study of 27 male riders, however, two-thirds showed at least "osteopenia," moderate bone loss. Four of those had severe bone thinning, or osteoporosis. The test group's average hip and spine bone densities were 10 percent lower than a control group of similar aged, moderately athletic noncycling men.
When I remarked to Nichols that 10 percent didn't seem like a big deal, she was agast.
"Clinically, 10 percent thinning is significant--not good--almost frightening," she said. "Because at age 50, average men have no bone loss at all..."
Good luck,
John
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Originally Posted by John C. Ratliff
Skydive69,
I have recently picked up a new book titled Bike for Life, How to Ride to 100, by Roy M. Wallack and Bill Katovsky (Marlowe & Company, New York, 2005, ISBN 1-56924-451-0). In it, they discuss a previously under estimated hazard to bicyclists, especially us older ones, called osteoproosis. Here are some quotes from Chapter 9, page 212:
Seeing this (there is a lot more discussion on the mechanism for bone loss in the book), and hearing you discuss the cervical vertebra which is not healing, I have to ask whether you have discussed your training with your doctor? If not, you might want to talk to him about it and be tested for this newly uncovered aspect of cycling contributing to osteoporosis. It could explain some of what's happening to you.
Good luck,
John
I have recently picked up a new book titled Bike for Life, How to Ride to 100, by Roy M. Wallack and Bill Katovsky (Marlowe & Company, New York, 2005, ISBN 1-56924-451-0). In it, they discuss a previously under estimated hazard to bicyclists, especially us older ones, called osteoproosis. Here are some quotes from Chapter 9, page 212:
Seeing this (there is a lot more discussion on the mechanism for bone loss in the book), and hearing you discuss the cervical vertebra which is not healing, I have to ask whether you have discussed your training with your doctor? If not, you might want to talk to him about it and be tested for this newly uncovered aspect of cycling contributing to osteoporosis. It could explain some of what's happening to you.
Good luck,
John
https://www.beezodogsplace.com/Pages/...s-Cycling.html
and previous numerous threads on osteo and cycling, like this for example:
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I am very new here and just happened on this thread which really caught my eye and I have sat here and read every post. It caught my eye because I have had paroxysmal atrial tachycardia for over 5 years now. Normally, atrial tachycardia is not as serious as Afib, but in my case it has been. Mainly because it has yet to be satisfactorally controlled, and my HR goes over 200bpm for sometimes days. Have done the ambulance scenario many times. I have had 2 RF ablations. Well, one actually. The first one in 2001 had to be aborted because the Dr. punctured the atrial wall and I ended up in ICU for a couple of days. I have been on so many different medications over the past 5 years that I can't count them all, and was recently put back on coumadin after another attempt at ablation in November which didn't work. I had been afraid to try the ablation again because of what happened the first time, but I was so sick of the condition and the medications that I thought I had no choice. Mine is in the left atrium which is very unusual and a lot more risky to go into. It took 6 catheters and the whole procedure lasted 7 hours. I am now back again on flecainide which controls it most of the time. My cardiologist says it IS AFib, but my electrophysiologist says it is not. Anyway, I have always been very active and hiked in the mountains (vigorously!)in Wyoming before I took up mountain biking here in AR 2 years ago. I have always wondered if maybe my lifestyle contributed to the onset of the tachycardia, and now after reading this thread, I am convinced. I am 61 yo and I am still going strong, but when I am having the tachycardia, I am debilitated, as I can't be in an upright position without nearly passing out. My electrophysiologist wants to try the ablation again, but I am very skeptical, but I hate being a mountain biker and being on the coumadin. Also, I have not yet been able to find any ladies to ride with me here, and I know it is not a good idea to go alone, but I do anyway, or not ride, which is not an option as far as I am concerned.
Anyway, thanks for listening, as I just had to add my 2 cents and let it be known that a very fast heart rate is not always Afib. Believe me, it feels the same as described on this thread. I always say I have a boxer in my chest using my heart for his punching bag and his rhythm really sucks! Sometimes it awakens me in the middle of the night and shakes the whole bed. I am very used to it now, though and it never scares me even when it makes me pass out. But it scares my husband and my family to death. It scares my family doctor and he usually puts me on the ambulance to the nearest emergency room 35 miles from his office.
DnvrFox, I am so happy for you that the ablation worked for you and you are now in NSR. That is so wonderful! Bless you, you have certainly earned the relief!
Please excuse the verbal diarrhea.
Anyway, thanks for listening, as I just had to add my 2 cents and let it be known that a very fast heart rate is not always Afib. Believe me, it feels the same as described on this thread. I always say I have a boxer in my chest using my heart for his punching bag and his rhythm really sucks! Sometimes it awakens me in the middle of the night and shakes the whole bed. I am very used to it now, though and it never scares me even when it makes me pass out. But it scares my husband and my family to death. It scares my family doctor and he usually puts me on the ambulance to the nearest emergency room 35 miles from his office.
DnvrFox, I am so happy for you that the ablation worked for you and you are now in NSR. That is so wonderful! Bless you, you have certainly earned the relief!
Please excuse the verbal diarrhea.
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Originally Posted by Lady Hawk
DnvrFox, I am so happy for you that the ablation worked for you and you are now in NSR. That is so wonderful! Bless you, you have certainly earned the relief!
I do have a couple of support/info exchange groups in which you may have an interest if you have not already located them.
https://health.groups.yahoo.com/group...yguid=11846886
https://www.afibbers.net/forum/list.php?f=4
From everything I have learned and read it is absolutely critical who does your ablation. I opted for Dr. Natale, world famous, from the Cleveland Clinic. Others go to Bordeaux, France.
There are also procedures such as the Maze and many variations of the maze.
Good luck. I hope you can find a solution.