Herb_Webb
Active member
Hi all, I've been lurking and occassionally posting a reply here occassionallly. Recently I was asked some serious questions about my choices regarding my Atrial Flutter treatment. So here's most of my story.....
I had my mitral valve replaced with a St Jude's mechanical in 1999. Ten years later on the date of my 20th wedding anniversary I was in the local ER hooked up to monitors and IVs trying to figure out and calm down a racing heart.
For the three days prior to this every time I checked my blood pressure and heart rate, whether with my home monitor or the one at the local pharmacy, my BP was normal with a HR of 150-155. Needless to say I was tired.
I took the day off work for our anniversary and it was still racing so we decided to get it checked out. We don't have a cardiologist in town so my option was drive over an hour or check into the ER. I chose the ER. I was there three hours watching my HR bounce between 150, 50, 75, 150, 100, 50 the whole time. I was diagnose with Supra Ventricular Tachycardia and made an appointment to see a cardiologist.
The cardiologist had a cancellation and I got in the very next day. He told me I had Atrial Flutter, lots of explanations and options. The options were meds (beta blockers), electroversion, or ablation. Getting shocked could happen that day so I chose that. The result was a normal sinus rhythm........temorarily.
5 weeks later the tachycardia returned. I had the beta blockers that were prescribed just in case. So I started taking them and rescheduled with my Dr. He prescribed Atenonol and I began taking it as prescribed. I was also taking Lysinopril for high BP at the time.
Ablation was something I knew of. One of my best friends had several done. For him it was lifesaving and life changing. For me this was not desirable....at this time in my life. My symptoms were minor compared to what he went thru.
So I began a journey of discovery to find something else that would work. I contacted an accupuncturist, a retired chiropractor who is also a nutritionist and talked to anyone that I thought might have a reasonable answer. I avoided what appeared to be "to good to be true" quickee cures like bracelets from Mars, crystals or pyramids.
The first success I had was with diet. I went on a diet known as food combining. The principles being that proper combinations lead to better digestion and better health. After one month I had lost 10 lbs and my BP began to drop. So I began to reduce my Lysinopril gradually. At two months I was down 20 lbs and had normal BP without meds for the first time in 11 years. Three months and I was down 33 lbs from 215 to 182 and went in for my annual checkup.
Dr confirmed that my BP was normal and had no issue that I had quit, especially since he knew that was my desire all along and I had done it in a responsible gradual way. I told him I was planning to try the same with the Atenonol for my arrhythmia. He said to keep him posted but it was OK if I tried it and kept track of it. When my blood work came back all my important numbers of cholestrol, triglycerides etc were better than the year before.
Two months later I was no longer taking Atenonol and my heart rate was consistently between 58 and 72 bpm at rest. When I exercised it rose normally and once I stopped it was back to normal within 30 minutes. This was the norm for about 9 months.
All was good or so it appeared until job stress and my fixation on certain things led me to quit eating the food combining way. I went for comfort foods at lunch, but still maintained the diet at home and weekends. Over 6 monts I gained back 12 lbs and the tachycardia returned. I still had the Atenonol and began taking it again.
My most recent annual checkup led to an echo and an app't to my cardiologist. Three months after the echo I got in to the cardiologist. He made it sound like nothing changed, same talk I got in 2009 about options. He was pleased that I no longer needed BP meds and had little problem with my desire to quit beta blockers as long as I was responsible about it.
Then we got the call that he had read my echo after my appointment (even though that is why I went to see him and I got billed for it). Now they want me on a cocktail of three drugs as preventative medicine. The explanation was that I was OK for now but it appeared my heart had begun deteriorating this would make me healthier 20 years from now.
About this time my monthly visit to our advisor, resulted in our introduction to Dr. Sherry Rogers book the High Blood Pressure Hoax and Magnesium supplements for irregular heartbeats. We bought the Mg supplement that day and began and I ordered the books on Amazon.com that night.
A month later and my Atrial Flutter (by my experience and feelings) have reduced significantly. It has not gone away but I am convinced that there are other causes to cardiac conditions rather than a deficiency of drugs.
I do not totally disregard modern medicine because without it and a St Jude's valve I would be 6 feet under now. But by my own experiences the past two years I have enough personal experience to continue this journey. Whether that is better nutrition, supplements, exercise, fasting (which I do intermittently), or a detox program for accumulated toxins I will continue. And I will keep my Dr informed as I go down this path.
Thanks for all who are here, I enjoy your stories and wish everyone the best of health regardless of whether we walk the same path.
have fun
Herb
I had my mitral valve replaced with a St Jude's mechanical in 1999. Ten years later on the date of my 20th wedding anniversary I was in the local ER hooked up to monitors and IVs trying to figure out and calm down a racing heart.
For the three days prior to this every time I checked my blood pressure and heart rate, whether with my home monitor or the one at the local pharmacy, my BP was normal with a HR of 150-155. Needless to say I was tired.
I took the day off work for our anniversary and it was still racing so we decided to get it checked out. We don't have a cardiologist in town so my option was drive over an hour or check into the ER. I chose the ER. I was there three hours watching my HR bounce between 150, 50, 75, 150, 100, 50 the whole time. I was diagnose with Supra Ventricular Tachycardia and made an appointment to see a cardiologist.
The cardiologist had a cancellation and I got in the very next day. He told me I had Atrial Flutter, lots of explanations and options. The options were meds (beta blockers), electroversion, or ablation. Getting shocked could happen that day so I chose that. The result was a normal sinus rhythm........temorarily.
5 weeks later the tachycardia returned. I had the beta blockers that were prescribed just in case. So I started taking them and rescheduled with my Dr. He prescribed Atenonol and I began taking it as prescribed. I was also taking Lysinopril for high BP at the time.
Ablation was something I knew of. One of my best friends had several done. For him it was lifesaving and life changing. For me this was not desirable....at this time in my life. My symptoms were minor compared to what he went thru.
So I began a journey of discovery to find something else that would work. I contacted an accupuncturist, a retired chiropractor who is also a nutritionist and talked to anyone that I thought might have a reasonable answer. I avoided what appeared to be "to good to be true" quickee cures like bracelets from Mars, crystals or pyramids.
The first success I had was with diet. I went on a diet known as food combining. The principles being that proper combinations lead to better digestion and better health. After one month I had lost 10 lbs and my BP began to drop. So I began to reduce my Lysinopril gradually. At two months I was down 20 lbs and had normal BP without meds for the first time in 11 years. Three months and I was down 33 lbs from 215 to 182 and went in for my annual checkup.
Dr confirmed that my BP was normal and had no issue that I had quit, especially since he knew that was my desire all along and I had done it in a responsible gradual way. I told him I was planning to try the same with the Atenonol for my arrhythmia. He said to keep him posted but it was OK if I tried it and kept track of it. When my blood work came back all my important numbers of cholestrol, triglycerides etc were better than the year before.
Two months later I was no longer taking Atenonol and my heart rate was consistently between 58 and 72 bpm at rest. When I exercised it rose normally and once I stopped it was back to normal within 30 minutes. This was the norm for about 9 months.
All was good or so it appeared until job stress and my fixation on certain things led me to quit eating the food combining way. I went for comfort foods at lunch, but still maintained the diet at home and weekends. Over 6 monts I gained back 12 lbs and the tachycardia returned. I still had the Atenonol and began taking it again.
My most recent annual checkup led to an echo and an app't to my cardiologist. Three months after the echo I got in to the cardiologist. He made it sound like nothing changed, same talk I got in 2009 about options. He was pleased that I no longer needed BP meds and had little problem with my desire to quit beta blockers as long as I was responsible about it.
Then we got the call that he had read my echo after my appointment (even though that is why I went to see him and I got billed for it). Now they want me on a cocktail of three drugs as preventative medicine. The explanation was that I was OK for now but it appeared my heart had begun deteriorating this would make me healthier 20 years from now.
About this time my monthly visit to our advisor, resulted in our introduction to Dr. Sherry Rogers book the High Blood Pressure Hoax and Magnesium supplements for irregular heartbeats. We bought the Mg supplement that day and began and I ordered the books on Amazon.com that night.
A month later and my Atrial Flutter (by my experience and feelings) have reduced significantly. It has not gone away but I am convinced that there are other causes to cardiac conditions rather than a deficiency of drugs.
I do not totally disregard modern medicine because without it and a St Jude's valve I would be 6 feet under now. But by my own experiences the past two years I have enough personal experience to continue this journey. Whether that is better nutrition, supplements, exercise, fasting (which I do intermittently), or a detox program for accumulated toxins I will continue. And I will keep my Dr informed as I go down this path.
Thanks for all who are here, I enjoy your stories and wish everyone the best of health regardless of whether we walk the same path.
have fun
Herb