Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

New to the group

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can about

AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months. Always

after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee. I am

open to drugs but am also looking for other methods...diet and stress

management, for example.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months. Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee. I am

> open to drugs but am also looking for other methods...diet and stress

> management, for example.

>

>

Hope it¹s not A Fib. I noticed that the same things would cause my

palpitations, especially the huge meal.

Kathleen Stept

, MS

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months. Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee. I am

> open to drugs but am also looking for other methods...diet and stress

> management, for example.

>

>

Hope it¹s not A Fib. I noticed that the same things would cause my

palpitations, especially the huge meal.

Kathleen Stept

, MS

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months. Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee. I am

> open to drugs but am also looking for other methods...diet and stress

> management, for example.

>

>

Hope it¹s not A Fib. I noticed that the same things would cause my

palpitations, especially the huge meal.

Kathleen Stept

, MS

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

In a message dated 5/26/04 8:40:36 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

Becunabird2@... writes:

> I am 30 years old, female.

Welcome to the group. Your taking charge early. That's good!

First, AF in of itself is not going to kill you. Second, at this stage of

your adventure, your GP will probably refer you to a cardiologist, in turn may

refer you to an Electrophysiologist. A Doctor who specializes in the heart

electrical system and heart arrhythmia's. They may order heart work up. An EKG,

echocardiogram and stress test. In some cases, a cardio MRI. All of this is

standard operating procedure.

To learn about AF go to www.affacts.org and explore the page(s). This is the

Atrial Fibrillation Foundation web address. I believe it is sponsored by

Massachusetts General Hospital. One of the nations top heart hospital's.

Ask lot's of question here on our page. Your a member now! In most cases,

your questions will be answered the same day. We are over one thousand strong,

from all over the world.'

We are not a medical page, we are a support page that offers our personal

experiences with AF. We talk about Doctor's, drug therapies, hospital's,

ablation

procedures, triggers and host of other topics.

You may want to prepare for your Doctor's visit. At this point, triggers

would be important. Triggers could be some of the following. Caffeine from

coffee-

tea- chocolate-

Cola drinks and some over the counter drugs i.e.Excederin. Other triggers are

MSG, stress, alcohol, cold drinks, sleeping on your left side (heart

compression) and others. Triggers are a personal thing. They differ with

everybody.

You should be aware that many cardiologists consider AF a nuisance and treat

it, I think, to casually. This is a result of these cardiologists not keeping

up with the research taking place in the US and the world. Many are into other

heart issues for economic reasons. Remember, if your not comfortable with

your Doctor or the diagnoses. Get a second opinion. Post your concerns here.

Maybe we can help.

Good luck and stay in touch.

Rich O

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

In a message dated 5/26/04 8:40:36 PM Eastern Daylight Time,

Becunabird2@... writes:

> I am 30 years old, female.

Welcome to the group. Your taking charge early. That's good!

First, AF in of itself is not going to kill you. Second, at this stage of

your adventure, your GP will probably refer you to a cardiologist, in turn may

refer you to an Electrophysiologist. A Doctor who specializes in the heart

electrical system and heart arrhythmia's. They may order heart work up. An EKG,

echocardiogram and stress test. In some cases, a cardio MRI. All of this is

standard operating procedure.

To learn about AF go to www.affacts.org and explore the page(s). This is the

Atrial Fibrillation Foundation web address. I believe it is sponsored by

Massachusetts General Hospital. One of the nations top heart hospital's.

Ask lot's of question here on our page. Your a member now! In most cases,

your questions will be answered the same day. We are over one thousand strong,

from all over the world.'

We are not a medical page, we are a support page that offers our personal

experiences with AF. We talk about Doctor's, drug therapies, hospital's,

ablation

procedures, triggers and host of other topics.

You may want to prepare for your Doctor's visit. At this point, triggers

would be important. Triggers could be some of the following. Caffeine from

coffee-

tea- chocolate-

Cola drinks and some over the counter drugs i.e.Excederin. Other triggers are

MSG, stress, alcohol, cold drinks, sleeping on your left side (heart

compression) and others. Triggers are a personal thing. They differ with

everybody.

You should be aware that many cardiologists consider AF a nuisance and treat

it, I think, to casually. This is a result of these cardiologists not keeping

up with the research taking place in the US and the world. Many are into other

heart issues for economic reasons. Remember, if your not comfortable with

your Doctor or the diagnoses. Get a second opinion. Post your concerns here.

Maybe we can help.

Good luck and stay in touch.

Rich O

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can

about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months.

Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee.

www.affacts.org the AFib Foundation site has a lot of background.

However, you can make a lot of progress while you're waiting for your

EKG (hope you don't have to wait long, I can't imagine why your

internist, for example, wouldn't fit you in within a few hours

maximum), by avoiding coffee/chocolate/tea/caffinate sodas,

stress/fights, etc. That may be all you have to do, and is safer

than most medication and procedures.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can

about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months.

Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee.

www.affacts.org the AFib Foundation site has a lot of background.

However, you can make a lot of progress while you're waiting for your

EKG (hope you don't have to wait long, I can't imagine why your

internist, for example, wouldn't fit you in within a few hours

maximum), by avoiding coffee/chocolate/tea/caffinate sodas,

stress/fights, etc. That may be all you have to do, and is safer

than most medication and procedures.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

> I am 30 years old, female. I am not yet diagnosed with AF but am

> awaiting an apointment for an EKG. I'm here to learn all I can

about

> AF. I have had brief (1 minute or less) episodes for 6 months.

Always

> after a huge meal, a fight with someone, or drinking coffee.

www.affacts.org the AFib Foundation site has a lot of background.

However, you can make a lot of progress while you're waiting for your

EKG (hope you don't have to wait long, I can't imagine why your

internist, for example, wouldn't fit you in within a few hours

maximum), by avoiding coffee/chocolate/tea/caffinate sodas,

stress/fights, etc. That may be all you have to do, and is safer

than most medication and procedures.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

Welcome, Donna:

Glad you joined our group. Let us know how everything goes.

Love to us all,

--

Ogut

The Whole Brain Game -- It's Not What You Think But How You Think It

-------------- Original message ----------------------

Hi my name is Donna, I live in Michigan. I have breast cancer her-2

positive. I had surgery Dec 16 of 2003 a total mass.I had 7m nodes

taken and of those 7 3 were bad I am stage 3. In March of 2004 I

started a clinical trial for herceptin. I did 4 rounds of chemo the

started 12 weeks every week of Taxol and Herceptin, the started 40

weeks of just Herceptin every week also in there I did 7 weeks every

day of rads. I finished my treatment April 27 of 2005. So far

everything is looking good, I have my 9 month check=up the end of next

month and praying that all is still fine. I have been married for 31

years and have three children and two beautiful grangchildren. I f

anyone would mlike to IM me ot email me please feel free.

Blessings to all

Doona

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...