Guest guest Posted September 25, 2004 Report Share Posted September 25, 2004 All- It is a blessing to realize one is not alone in all of this. A perverse blessing perhaps because if one were alone then nobody else would be in these straits. Pure idealism but wouldn't it be loverly? Sorry Pete I've got you beat--over 48 hours again with a climbing bpm. Over 130 for over 4 hours--but to some on this board that would be a piece of cake compared to 200 or so. I used to set an upper limit of 130 for considering going to the ER--now I've upped the marker to 140. When I get there I'll probably increase it to 150 if still basically asymptomatic. This is a form of roulette isn't it?? When I was in the ER on New Years Eve they wouldn't even let me off the guerney to pee because I was 'over 130' and they didn't want me 'passing out on them'. Honestly, medicos are such extremists Wore a holter yesterday and am curious about whether anybody actually looks at 24 hours of data--do they digitize it and put to a computer to do statistics? I can't imagine any cardio or EP actually giving the raw data more than a perfunctory look. The first (and only other) time I was on a holter the silly thing stopped working before I left the Heart Center, not that I knew. My cardio blithely said oh it doesn't really matter you keep such a good history anyway. Translation: we really hardly look at the stuff. The gal who put the holter on checked this time to see if it was working (what a concept). Yes and of course I was in AF. She looked at the spikes and said oh there's a PVC--but everybody has them. Is that true? (PVC=premature ventricular contraction). Bummed out and grateful just to have a compassionate audience to vent to. Shelby/Huntsville AL/Toprol 100 mg, Verapamil 360 mg, Coumadin 6 mg/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2004 Report Share Posted September 26, 2004 >Wore a holter yesterday and am curious about whether anybody actually looks at 24 hours of data--do they digitize it and put to a computer to do statistics? I can't imagine any cardio or EP actually giving the raw data more than a perfunctory look. T....The gal who put the holter on checked this time to see if it was working (what a concept). Yes and of course I was in AF. She looked at the spikes and said oh there's a PVC--but everybody has them. Is that true? (PVC=premature ventricular contraction). Yes, they are looked at but my impression is that someone other than your doc, perhaps a specialist tech, sifts thru them first to isolate the interesting parts, and then either your doc or another doc reviews the results. My old cardio would go over parts with me. They get a big printout of graphs and a summary page, so many pacs, so many pvcs, etc. and a copy of interesting parts pulled out to look at. Pvcs are nothing to worry about if your heart is healthy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2004 Report Share Posted September 26, 2004 > ... The first (and only other) time I was on a holter the silly thing stopped working before I left the Heart Center, not that I knew. My cardio blithely said oh it doesn't really matter you keep such a good history anyway. That's stupid. The purpose of a holter is to find out what's really happening, not what the patient may be able to detect. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 26, 2004 Report Share Posted September 26, 2004 Alas, I think everybody, even those not in our fix, does have PVCs from time to time. However, I don't like it much when I have them, although I've never gone into afib as a result. Brenta Compassionate companions in this misery snip--. She looked at the spikes and said oh there's a PVC--but everybody has them. Is that true? (PVC=premature ventricular contraction). > Bummed out and grateful just to have a compassionate audience to vent to. > Shelby/Huntsville AL/Toprol 100 mg, Verapamil 360 mg, Coumadin 6 mg/ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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