Guest guest Posted December 28, 2001 Report Share Posted December 28, 2001 I visited my new cardiologist, who is an electrophysiologist, yesterday for only the second time since last July's first visit with him. Although he seemed not quite so optimistic and upbeat as in the first visit, perhaps because all those late night cardioversions are wearing him down, he did have some new ideas which I haven't yet heard from another doctor. (He is fresh out of training with much knowledge but not much experience. My primary care physician described him as " very smart. " ) 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. Another bit of information actually came from his cardiac nurse when she was looking at my wildly careening TSH values due to my constant experimentation with thyroxine doses. My latest value was a respectable 4, but values over the past year have varied from 5 -10. This cardiac nurse said she thought that this could be playing a role in the increased frequency of afib because keeping TSH levels stable helps to prevent afib. When values vary wildly or are either too high or too low, afib is often the result. However, I have been taking a stable dose of Levoxyl for the past three months now, so I'm not sure that the December afib outbreak is due to this. Yet another interesting piece of information was my doctor's attitude toward ablation. When I asked him if I would be a candidate, he said that ablation could help my situation but he does not believe the risk involved would be justified at this point because medications Atenolol and Verapamil are controlling my afib so well at this point. He did say that all current forms of ablation carry a rather high risk, and that one should be fairly desperate for relief before undergoing this procedure. (This is from an electrophysiologist who does ablations every day.) However, he did say that he has hope that new procedures will be available in the near future due to research. After looking at yesterday's EKG, my cardiologist said that nothing has really changed and that he would be reluctant to try any new drugs since I am feeling virtually no afib symptoms on my current medications. My heart shows no signs of developing heart disease after eighteen years of afib, which might be encouraging to others here who have wondered about the long term effects afib on the heart. My only heart problem is still afib. 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. Anyway, he wants me to continue on the same regimen with Atenolol and Verapamil because although those drugs are not preventing afib episodes, they make my life symptom-free when I am in afib. I will also continue with the Coumadin, of course, although I have been off of it three days now in preparation for a colonoscopy which I had today in hopes of discovering a stomach cause for my afib. (This was my first colonoscopy, and all I can say is that it was really " fun! " ) 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...
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