Guest guest Posted June 13, 2005 Report Share Posted June 13, 2005 He wants me to walk 10 to 20 minutes as tolerated QOD whatever that means, must look it up, after I get going on various supplements and treatments. Resting either lying down or sitting with feet up, which I do anyway. Didn't discuss sex. I do little bits of housework and lie down, at present, and am almost to the point of riding through the store in one of those carts. Standing in line messes me up and if someone comes along and wants to talk, I am in big trouble, melting into the floor. Now that I know it's stressing hell out of my heart, I won't be just standing there any more. Also have a problem walking through a large store. Ten years ago I could swim a bit, 50 meters, hang onto side for two minutes gasping for air, up to eight widths, but I'm in much worse shape. Finally realized that my efforts to exercise were making me crash with what seemed like an odd kind of stomach flu. I wouldn't throw up but I would wake up with the whirlies, my stomach would get weird and I couldn't eat much so my weight was always dropping down in the 90s. Talked about this with Cheney. I noted this hasn't happened for a while and he thinks it's because I'm actually worse in terms of my heart function, and I think he's right because I can't do as much physically as I could in those days when I would push and crash with the " flu. " Helen > Anyone is going to Cheney talk, or Cheney patients, can you tell me what he says regarding exertion for patients with the diastolic heart failure? I know we have a low level anyway, but does he tell patients to avoid exertion like small amounts of house cleaning, walking, swimming, and what about sex? Thanks. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 My memory is that he thinks CFS patients should attempt to push their boundaries with exercise a bit but be careful of not going overboard. Exercise is actually not contraindicated in heart failure. I know there are different kinds and causes of heart failure but an paper I read indicated that unless the patient was in the last most severe stage of heart failure then mild exercise was helpful. There wasnt much research done on exercise and diastolic heart failure however. Theres more data overall on systolic heart failure. They've really just become really aware of how common diastolic heart failure, in the last, I dont know, 10 years or so. The more they look for it the more they find it but it is found more in the elderly. Thats my recollection anyway. kdpart@... wrote: Anyone is going to Cheney talk, or Cheney patients, can you tell me what he says regarding exertion for patients with the diastolic heart failure? I know we have a low level anyway, but does he tell patients to avoid exertion like small amounts of house cleaning, walking, swimming, and what about sex? Thanks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 This article addresses exertion in diastolic heart failure: http://www.chfpatients.com/faq/dhf.htm It sounds to me like it's generally a bad idea in diastolic heart failure. What does Cheney see as the benefits of mild exercise for DHF patients? Peggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2005 Report Share Posted June 14, 2005 All I got on this is a sheet of paper saying to walk ten to twenty minutes a day as tolerated. I really can't walk very far without getting my butt kicked, especially in this humidity, so I won't push it. He asked me how many hours a day I spent lying down or sitting with my feet up. I figured about 22, which was pretty typical of his patient population. That's 2 hours a day on my feet, all added up, and sitting with my feet down. I am to maintain that ratio. This will be pretty easy since I always sit with my feet up at home. I generally do a few minutes of housework and then lie down. A round of Tai Chi and then sit down. Now that I know I have a heart problem I'm not pushing anything any more. If someone starts talking to me while I'm outside I just sit down, I don't care where it is. Sitting on the ground with my knees bent is better than sitting in a chair anyway. Sometimes I get to go for rides on our tandem. I sit in back with my feet up and peddle a little now and then. That's a good form of exercise for me, peddle two minutes, rest for twenty. I get to see the beautiful bike path on someone else's muscle power and I help him lose weight hauling me along. Helen > This article addresses exertion in diastolic heart failure: > http://www.chfpatients.com/faq/dhf.htm > > It sounds to me like it's generally a bad idea in diastolic heart failure. > What does Cheney see as the benefits of mild exercise for DHF patients? > > Peggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2005 Report Share Posted June 15, 2005 I used to get sick a lot when I was working. It felt like flu but who gets flu eight times in one year, as I did in 98, the last year I worked? I was real puzzled by it but I'm not now. My flu attacks generally involved my digestion but I wouldn't actually vomit, although I would feel nauseated for weeks on end. Those attacks fit perfectly into Cheney's theory about loss of circulation hitting the digestion and he confirmed that last week. As for the emotional stressor theory, I've had an extreme amount since I quit working, but I still don't get the " flu " much any more. That's because I sleep more and don't do much of anything but read. Had a mini-crash in February that briefly involved my stomach because I was taking a Tai Chi class and standing too long. These attacks always feel like a virus coming on but then they aren't. They are CFIDS relapses brought on by over-exertion. Helen > > Anyone is going to Cheney talk, or Cheney patients, can you tell me > what he says regarding exertion for patients with the diastolic heart > failure? I know we have a low level anyway, but does he tell patients > to avoid exertion like small amounts of house cleaning, walking, > swimming, and what about sex? Thanks. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2005 Report Share Posted June 15, 2005 >The truth is, as I can see from having eventually gotten home health care, that I do less since I don't have to, and thus I have less symptoms and am not always crashing. That's true for me, too. I've been able to hire help a couple times for a few months each time. It helped my function level more than almost anything else I've done. Function dropped again when I was back on my own. -Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2005 Report Share Posted June 15, 2005 hi Adrienne: I would get those if I actually had the flu but that is rare. Sometimes I get allergy attacks/ sinus infections, but the vast majority of my " illnesses " over the years have followed this pattern: It starts either with belching attacks or I wake up in the morning and the ceiling is spinning. I feel like I'm going to vomit but never do. I get a low grade fever, never more than 99.8. Get real weak. Everything I eat sits like lead in my stomach so I don't eat much, protein powder, pureed food. This used to happen all the time when I was working. I was sick more often than not and could rarely crack 100 lbs due to recurrent illness. Now it hardly ever happens. Cheney thinks I've progressed in my disease because my stomach doesn't get whacked now if I overexert. Last Halloween was speaking here and in this town Halloween is a huge event. You cannot park anywhere near the university. So I wanted to go and was home alone, so no way to even get dropped off nearby. I decided to walk and sat down three times to rest on the way there, about 3/4 of a mile away, hilly terrain. While there I finangled a seat on a sawhorse where I sat for two hours but with my legs down. On the way back I sat down seven times to rest but it did me no good. I was trashed. My stomach didn't blow out from it but on election day, I vote about 200 yards from my house, if that much, a serious hill on the way back. I had to sit down, lurch a few steps, sit down again, over and over, to get up that hill. I was trashed for a long time. Ten years ago I could have walked uptown without stopping and it would clean my clock but nothing like this. So I am worse but I don't go into the stomach stuff. Cheney thought that was indicative of the heart failure progressing somehow, I told him this same story. Helen > > > Anyone is going to Cheney talk, or Cheney patients, can you > tell me > > what he says regarding exertion for patients with the diastolic > heart > > failure? I know we have a low level anyway, but does he tell > patients > > to avoid exertion like small amounts of house cleaning, walking, > > swimming, and what about sex? Thanks. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 The article I cited before does mention exercise. From: http://www.chfpatients.com/faq/dhf.htm: <<Exercise in a healthy person makes the heart relax more quickly and lowers LV pressure faster. The heart muscle actually stretches and gets larger when full of blood just before pumping it out. This increases EF. In a healthy person, these actions help the body handle exercise. In DHF, those actions are very limited. The heart's stiffness prevents it from stretching to increase its size when filled with blood. EF does not rise, and patients get short of breath and very tired. Often, there is quite a rise in blood pressure and heart rate during exercise. The rise in blood pressure makes the heart work harder, which screws up the entire pumping cycle. These changes increase diastolic pressures. High diastolic pressures reduce lung function and make breathing harder. Low heart output during exercise causes fatigue in the legs and other muscles. >> What is important to note is that diastolic heart failure is DIFFERENT from congestive heart failure, and often what is good for one is bad for the other. So following prescriptions for " heart failure " (usually referring to congestive heart failure) or " congestive heart failure " is not necessarily a good idea for diastolic heart failure. Also, even without CFIDS, diastolic heart failure patients have a better prognosis. Peggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 Cort: Great idea. I will do that. Will take me a while, since my problems date back to 1978. Actually I have some of it written up already for my acupuncturist and there's gonna be a new chapter as I try out Cheney's new treatment in the coming year. Right now I got a husband with a badly broken arm so we are waiting for an appt with an orthopedic surgeon. Maybe it will be set next week. It's no wonder I drive eight hours to see a specialist, this town has the most pathetic medical care. But I will get to writing my story when I can, sounds like a good idea. No one in my life has ever really wanted to hear it, so it will be a change to have people actually be interested. I've had a lot of the " it's all in your head " bs slung at me. Now I can say, no, it's all in my heart and has been for decades. In the meantime I won't be going for any more long walks, that's for sure! Helen > > > > Anyone is going to Cheney talk, or Cheney patients, can you > > tell me > > > what he says regarding exertion for patients with the > diastolic > > heart > > > failure? I know we have a low level anyway, but does he tell > > patients > > > to avoid exertion like small amounts of house cleaning, > walking, > > > swimming, and what about sex? Thanks. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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