Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 Hi , Well...the strange part about the stomach thing is apart from people who actually have Afib there indeed seems to be very little coming from the medical community about this, i've searched websites and as you say most doctors seem to believe there's no way there could be a link. The strange part is that my GP actually told me he thought it was probably due to me having a cascade stomach and the reflux stuff. And when my causin was in hospital where they put her back into NSR the cardio also told her it might be because of the stomach acting up in a big way. Like me she is,apart from the occasional Afib runs, always in NSR and there is no sign of Afib normally...so maybe the stomach thing i more related to the lone paroxysmal and not to 'normal' Afib. I have little information about cascade stomachs, apart from a vague description my doc gave me but i did come across this URL. http://www.medun.acad.bg/medun/Abstracts/abs496.htm Which states: " In a random sample of 396 patients with stomach complaints, 54 were found to have cascade stomach (overall frequency 13.6). The analysis of the results showed the leading cause of this condition to be adhesion of the front costal diaphragm sinus. " Now i'm not but the " costal diaphragm sinus " is very close to the heart i believe. And maybe xx % of those who have a cascade stomach, or other anatomical disformation to the stomach go into Afib because of it. I have no idea if anything can be done about it. I did have a errrr.....the tube/camera down the throat thing..and they told me all was fine. But in a local hospital they did the X-ray with barium of my stomach and that did reveal the cascade stomach... According to my GP the X-ray is far more reliable for things like this. So maybe a X-ray would be a good thing ask about. Because my causin and i have the same thing and the same symptoms i'm very curious if she has a cascade stomach too....but she never got her stomach checked out and knowing her she will not have it checked out cause she doesn't care too much about the Afib runs. I always keep looking for other causes, and sometimes i see thing i go 'hey'...like the connection with inflammation. But i'm pretty sure it's the stomach for me. Take care, Willem At 00:06 29-12-2001 -0500, you wrote: >Anyway, of interest to me and possibly to others here, was his statement that >afib can indeed be caused by stomach problems in some people! This is the >first time I have heard any doctor validate in either spoken or written word >what so many of us here know to be absolutely true. My own brother (not the >one in afib) who is a medical doctor has told me many times that this idea is >ridiculous. Usually when I have told doctors in the past that I am sure >there is a connection between afib and my stomach upheaval, I would be >rewarded with a blank, uncomprehending stare or a patronizing " Really??!! " >This noncommittal reaction would typically be followed by a hasty change in >subject as if to prevent further embarrassingly ignorant conjecture from this >upstart patient (me!) My new cardiologist is the first doctor to dignify my >theory about the stomach/heart connection born of the experience of numerous >afib bouts starting with stomach pains or gas. > >My gastroenterologists preliminary report >after the procedure was that no problems were discovered there. Everything >is " normal, normal, normal. " I don't know how this can be when my stomach >symptoms so often seem abnormal, abnormal abnormal! However, he did do some >scraping and biopsy, apparently looking for some type of infection, I guess. >So I won't give up on the stomach-afib connection yet. My dream is that he >will discover some easily treatable stomach parasite or such which has been >irritating my poor vagus nerve and driving me into afib. I guess it doesn't >work that way in reality, but I can always dream. > in afib in Seattle _________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 In a message dated 12/29/01 12:07:55 AM Eastern Standard Time, Starfi6314@... writes: > Oh, and > also he said that the printout from the ECG machine was wrong because it > said > " sinus arrhythmia, " but he said I was definitely in afib. His nurse > described my pulse as " slightly irregular " when she took it. I mention > this > because I think this issue came up here once: whether ECG readings are > ever > wrong. He said the error was a computer error. > > I think it would be more accurate to say that the computer's interpretation of the ECG reading was wrong, not that the reading was wrong. I assume that ECG machines are equipped with a program which does an automatic interpretation of the results. However, becase ECGs are complex, a skillful doctor may often disagree with the machine-produced results. I see nothing extraordinary in this. Victor Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 Can anyone tell me what cascade tummy feels like. I have had problems on and off with my stomach. It feels like a cramping, bearing down low in the abdomen which I initially muddled up with constipation. It wasn't. I then put it down to irritable bowel. It usually hits me in the mornings or the middle of the night. The pain is so severe that it wakes me up and I have to get up. I wonder if I should get this checked out. Fran > >Anyway, of interest to me and possibly to others here, was his statement that > >afib can indeed be caused by stomach problems in some people! This is the > >first time I have heard any doctor validate in either spoken or written word > >what so many of us here know to be absolutely true. My own brother (not the > >one in afib) who is a medical doctor has told me many times that this idea is > >ridiculous. Usually when I have told doctors in the past that I am sure > >there is a connection between afib and my stomach upheaval, I would be > >rewarded with a blank, uncomprehending stare or a patronizing " Really??!! " > >This noncommittal reaction would typically be followed by a hasty change in > >subject as if to prevent further embarrassingly ignorant conjecture from this > >upstart patient (me!) My new cardiologist is the first doctor to dignify my > >theory about the stomach/heart connection born of the experience of numerous > >afib bouts starting with stomach pains or gas. > > > >My gastroenterologists preliminary report > >after the procedure was that no problems were discovered there. Everything > >is " normal, normal, normal. " I don't know how this can be when my stomach > >symptoms so often seem abnormal, abnormal abnormal! However, he did do some > >scraping and biopsy, apparently looking for some type of infection, I guess. > >So I won't give up on the stomach-afib connection yet. My dream is that he > >will discover some easily treatable stomach parasite or such which has been > >irritating my poor vagus nerve and driving me into afib. I guess it doesn't > >work that way in reality, but I can always dream. > > in afib in Seattle > > > _________________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 Hi Fran, I don't think cascade stomach has to result in pain... As for how it feels...bloating, too much air in the stomach...pressure on the diaphram...tightness in the stomach area.. I think one of the problems with a cascade stomach is that it empties itself in one go...opposed to the normal slow bit by bit process.. I do have cramps and pain down low, and every once in a while blood in my feaces for a week orso, but i don't think it's related to the cascade stomach...but either to IBS or krohns..or polips or whatever...no idea and i really don't feel the need to go to hospitals again to get a defnite answer on that one. Take care Willem At 15:05 29-12-2001 +0000, you wrote: >Can anyone tell me what cascade tummy feels like. I have had problems >on and off with my stomach. It feels like a cramping, bearing down >low in the abdomen which I initially muddled up with constipation. It >wasn't. I then put it down to irritable bowel. > >It usually hits me in the mornings or the middle of the night. The >pain is so severe that it wakes me up and I have to get up. > >I wonder if I should get this checked out. _________________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 Thanks Willem I can relate to that sometimes. I wish I had paid more attention before the AF became chronic. Its hard now to tie it into anything. Fran > >Can anyone tell me what cascade tummy feels like. I have had problems > >on and off with my stomach. It feels like a cramping, bearing down > >low in the abdomen which I initially muddled up with constipation. It > >wasn't. I then put it down to irritable bowel. > > > >It usually hits me in the mornings or the middle of the night. The > >pain is so severe that it wakes me up and I have to get up. > > > >I wonder if I should get this checked out. > > > _________________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 In a message dated 12/29/2001 10:15:23 AM Pacific Standard Time, victortt@... writes: << I think it would be more accurate to say that the computer's interpretation of the ECG reading was wrong, not that the reading was wrong. I assume that ECG machines are equipped with a program which does an automatic interpretation of the results. However, becase ECGs are complex, a skillful doctor may often disagree with the machine-produced results. I see nothing extraordinary in this. >> Victor, when I said that the problem was a computer error, I meant that the computer program had misread the tracing of the EKG machine but my doctor correctly interpreted the graph printed by the machine. At least in this part of the country it is indeed extraordinary, I think, for a doctor to disagree with computer-generated interpretations. Maybe you live among a different breed of doctors in your territory, but I have only encountered one doctor (other than my present cardiologist) in these parts who would question test results. :-) That was my brother's doctor who made him have three thyroid tests in three weeks time when the initial test showed that my brother's thyroid level was low. Every subsequent test has shown his thyroid level to be normal. If the doctor had operated exclusively on the results of those first and second erroneous tests, he would have prescribed unnecessary thyroid hormone for a person who was already in afib. Perhaps it is not unusual for the computer to misread the ECG machine tracings, but it's never happened before in my experience. On one occasion, my former cardiologist, now retired, could not tell whether I was in afib or sinus by taking my pulse. I couldn't tell either because the pulse was almost regular at 70 beats per minute. The ECG test revealed that the machine recorded afib at that time, and my cardiologist accepted that as categorical proof, not questioning the computer printout. That reaction of acceptance seems more standard among the doctors of my experience. My new cardiologist seems to be a " different breed of cat. " in afib in Seattle :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2001 Report Share Posted December 29, 2001 In a message dated 12/29/01 5:27:45 PM Pacific Standard Time, Starfi6314@... writes: << Perhaps it is not unusual for the computer to misread the ECG machine tracings, but it's never happened before in my experience >> , when my cardio was going over the thirty day heart monitor readings with me, she noted on a number of them that the machine was wrong. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2001 Report Share Posted December 30, 2001 > > Perhaps it is not unusual for the computer to misread the ECG machine > tracings, but it's never happened before in my experience. It's happened to me, on one occasion while I was on a 12 point ECG both the computer and the junior doctor failed to spot Atrial Flutter. (The graph on the ECG paper was correct but the interpretation of the graph wasn't) > The ECG test revealed that the > machine recorded afib at that time, and my cardiologist accepted that as > categorical proof, not questioning the computer printout. I've never seen an ECG machine that just prints an interpretation out - all the ones I've been hooked to also plot the graphs. Any cardiologist will be looking at the graph to confirm the results. - AFib is one of the easier arrhythmias to spot because of the lack of p wave so even a cursory glance may have been enough for an expert to spot the AFib. -- D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 30, 2001 Report Share Posted December 30, 2001 In a message dated 12/30/2001 2:39:55 AM Pacific Standard Time, james@... writes: << I've never seen an ECG machine that just prints an interpretation out - all the ones I've been hooked to also plot the graphs. Any cardiologist will be looking at the graph to confirm the results. - AFib is one of the easier arrhythmias to spot because of the lack of p wave so even a cursory glance may have been enough for an expert to spot the AFib. >> , I've never seen an ECG report without the plotting of the graph either. The ECG machines of my experience plot the graph, and the computer generates the printed analysis on the printout which the doctor reads. My previous cardiologist, however, frequently seemed undecided about interpretation of the graph in a number of respects, including whether or not I was in afib. Also, he was on one occasion undecided about whether the graph included a certain wave that would indicate that ablation would be appropriate for me. He had to consult with an electrophysiologist on that point. Apparently some doctors are not expert enough to read and make autonomous decisions about ECG graphs. in afib in Seattle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 31, 2001 Report Share Posted December 31, 2001 The kind of ECG I have plots out the graphs and also has a printed interpretation in the top corner. However, my GP never agrees with it. Fran > In a message dated 12/30/2001 2:39:55 AM Pacific Standard Time, > james@d... writes: > > << I've never seen an ECG machine that just prints an interpretation out - all > the ones I've been hooked to also plot the graphs. Any cardiologist will be > looking at the graph to confirm the results. - AFib is one of the easier > arrhythmias to spot because of the lack of p wave so even a cursory glance > may have been enough for an expert to spot the AFib. > >> > , I've never seen an ECG report without the plotting of the graph > either. The ECG machines of my experience plot the graph, and the computer > generates the printed analysis on the printout which the doctor reads. My > previous cardiologist, however, frequently seemed undecided about > interpretation of the graph in a number of respects, including whether or not > I was in afib. Also, he was on one occasion undecided about whether the > graph included a certain wave that would indicate that ablation would be > appropriate for me. He had to consult with an electrophysiologist on that > point. Apparently some doctors are not expert enough to read and make > autonomous decisions about ECG graphs. > in afib in Seattle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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