Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 First, thanks to all who responded yesterday. I'm now looking forward to a nice boring flight. (Except for the thunderstorms predicted on landing...of course) Someone said yesterday that they thought that I had a particular kind of toughness because I didn't go into the ER with the pulse rate that I had. I know that this thread has been done before and there's even a poll up on the site. It may be worth revisiting, though. I've pretty well reached the point that a standard brand fib episode, no matter what its severity, won't send me to the ER. In my experience a trip to the ER means 6-12 hours hooked up to monitors with a final output of " You know that thing that you had? Well, you've got it again. " Uh, I could have told them that -- and usually have. Now the hesitancy to take any action may flow from the fact that my cardio has a reputation as a prima Donna who kicks butt if anyone screws up his patients. But in my limited experience, that's part of the job description of cardiologists. They're the medical equivalents of Top Guns. I think that there are other factors, though. The folks in the ER have a limited range of options. They can medicate, but when I go into ER, I already have a drug regimen in place. That reduces their options further. They can cardiovert but there's often a reluctance to do that when there's already a history of having it done. It's a short term fix to a long term problem. (And I've usually eaten before I go in, meaning that they like to wait 8-12 hours before cardioverting.) So I stay out of the ER, trying to be as normal as possible. If it's an isolated instance (yesterday was my first verifiable episode in four of five months), I phone the doc. If the fib has been high frequency, I usually don't even do that. (Another instance of " You know that stuff you had?... " ) Some of the instances are harder, some are easier. But the old bottom line keeps surfacing: " Fib won't kill you. " And I find ERs bad enough that I try to save them for things that will -- or kidney stones, but that's another forum. BTW, Kathleen, I'm convinced that the depression (if it walks like a duck...) is a part of the Fib itself. Extended episodes, or even extended periods with lots of episodes, tend to put me in the dumper. I haven't used traditional antidepressants (I'm not sure how much of the depression fits into the seratonin model. SPECULATION ALERT I'm not a doctor, but at an intuitive level, the suppression of blood flow and consequently oxygen to the brain feels like a more likely culprit. (It would be an interesting study for someone to do -- even more interesting if the oxygen level were tested at a constant normal level, at a constant low level and at a randomly varying level. My guess would be that the last one would be the one with the nastiest effect on mental state.) Bill Manson " Wouldn't you hate it if the future weren't the best thing you ever did? " -- Rauschenberg Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 I use to get very tired and depressed. The depression was put down to mental problems but it was then explained that you heart when in AF only worked at 75 of its capacity. So all the good stuff that should be pumped around your body was not. I think you can draw your own conclusions on this one. C Uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 I use to get very tired and depressed. The depression was put down to mental problems but it was then explained that you heart when in AF only worked at 75 of its capacity. So all the good stuff that should be pumped around your body was not. I think you can draw your own conclusions on this one. C Uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 1, 2004 Report Share Posted September 1, 2004 I use to get very tired and depressed. The depression was put down to mental problems but it was then explained that you heart when in AF only worked at 75 of its capacity. So all the good stuff that should be pumped around your body was not. I think you can draw your own conclusions on this one. C Uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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