Guest guest Posted September 11, 2003 Report Share Posted September 11, 2003 Moose, Welcome!! You came to the right place for the help and encouragement you need! Bette Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 21, 2004 Report Share Posted May 21, 2004 Kim - I'm not sure who you'd go to, but you might want to investigate the reasons WHY you are low in magnesium? I mean.. is there something (other than stress) physiologically going on in your body that makes you more susecptible to its loss? Instead of just supplementing, find out why and try to fix the source? I'm not even sure who could do that... someone who specializes in nutritional imbalances.. there has to be a specialty for that somewhere? Or perhaps talk to a nutritionists about your diet.. maybe you could supplement your supplements by upping magnesium rich foods in your diet? I know that almonds are high in magnesium, so I've been eating them as my afternoon snack for months now (although there was just a giant recall on almonds sold by Trader Joes and two other companies)... I'm sure there are plenty of other foods that might help as well.. and certainly 'naners are great for the potassium! just a thought! Stef t2doulamom wrote: Hello, and thank you for writing! Reading over my post, I realize I was not as clear as I could have been......actually, I *did* go off the cardizem after 2 months last year ( 120 mg), and did very well with no problems at all ( went to amusement parks and rode the adrenal busters with my kids a few times, even!) , until the PAC's began to be troublesome a couple of months ago.........again, I feel now , because of low potassium and magnesium. Extra life stress uses up available magnesium, and I have been right in the middle of applying for a loan to build a house, with lots of roadblocks and starts and stops, and now our family doing a lot of the building work ourselves, and I do believe that this affected me more than I realized. I just began the cardizem again this week, after 3 straight days of premature beats that were so frequent that it interfered with life and sleep, and I did not know what they even were, nor link them to the a-fib at all until the doctor did. I am hoping that after 1 month of this, and strong magnesium supplementation, I can wean myself off again.....that is the plan anyway. ( I should know tomorrow about blood levels of the mag and other minerals, twice in the last year I have had low levels), and by the way, does anyone have a suggestion on optimal magnesium supplementation? It does not seem me that normal dose supplementation does the trick for me, but I don't know what the outer ranges of safety are. Also, those of you who do mag supplements, do you take a 2:1 ratio with calcium, or mag only? Personally, Stef, I agree with you completely, and that is the direction I am working towards. Just dialoguing with others is such a comfort to me. Blessings, Kim Re: hello, new here Kim - having had " butterflies in my heart " my entire life, and PACs for as long as I can remember, my only question to you is why, after just one episode, and especially one apparently triggered by low potassium and calcium, do you remain on medication? Heart medication in and of itself is not without risk, and/or side effects, and I guess I wonder why you're on 240 cardizem after just one event? When I had my first several events, I was treated with medication just long enough to get me back into rhythm, and then that was it... I had about 2 or 3 short lived episodes per year... when this proved to be a pattern, (still only 2 or 3 a year) I was put on 120 Cardizem and told to bump to 240 if I had an event... I stayed at 120 for more than a year, and this past Jan, I had a bad episode, complicated, I think, by a viral intestinal illness, and was put on anti-arrythmics... Now I think I'm WAY over medicated.. my heart does things now that it never did before.. all kinds of short runs, hard beats... etc... I stay in rhythm, but I often think these " weirdnesses " are due to the meds and not to my own heart! I am not suggesting you get off medication yourself, but you might talk to your doctor about it.. ESPECIALLY since you had verifiable evidence (your potassium deficiency) of something that would trigger afib in an otherwise normal heart... I would guess that regulating the potassium and calcium, might be enough to keep you out of afib from now on. Just a thought. Stef joyfulexpectations wrote: Hello, and thanks for letting me be here among you, I am encouraged already. I am a 43 year old woman, who is quickly finding her life changing, although things do not seem to be nearly as severe for me as for others. I had 1 sudden and out of the blue a-fib episode in March of 2003, which responded to meds in the ER after 4 hours, and I was able to go home. Was found to be low in potassium, calcium, and magesium at the time, and began to take cardizem and supplement the minerals. Did very well, and had no recurrences at all, until beginning in Feb of this year, began to notice the " skipped beat " feeling, which I now know is premature beats, which is basically a precursor to an a-fib episode.........if I am not correct here, please feel free to educate me! I am still learning. Are ectopics the same thing as PAC'S, can someone tell me? I am still learning the jargon. Yesterday was my worst day ever with the PAC'S, and we will probably be doing the holter monitor soon, but first I have to come up with the money to do it, we currently are self-employed people with no health insurance. So now I am taking the timed released version of cardizem, 240 mgs, again supplementing with a good cal/mag supplement,and trying some simple things for stress management and coping skills, which I am definitely ready to hear more expertise from all of you, I feel this is key. Another question: do any of you feel a dull headache on your days when the premature beats are at their worst? And what alternative remedies has anyone had success with? What lifestyle changes have been most beneficial to you? Thanks so much in advance. Blessings, Kim Web Page - http://www.afibsupport.com List owner: AFIBsupport-owner For help on how to use the group, including how to drive it via email, send a blank email to AFIBsupport-help Nothing in this message should be considered as medical advice, or should be acted upon without consultation with one's physician. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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