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Palpitations

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All Content by Palpitations

  1. So here I am. Sheesh. I don't know anymore than I did when I started this thread. Oops! Yes, I do know more! I learned about pulse deficit, pulsus paradoxus, and pulsus differens! Yes, I talk to myself and I answer back!
  2. Well I had an EKG, a holter monitor test, and and echocardiogram. It took the doctors **** a month to read the tests. The print out on the EKG said that it could not rule out an anterior infarct. The doctor said that the EKG print out was wrong because there was some kind of problem with the leads or the computer, said the EKG was normal without ordering a second EKG. The next doctor reads the holter monitor report and says in the absence of hyperthyroidism that I should be worked up for "inappropriate sinus tachycardia" (IST). The third doctor read the echo and said that the echo was essentially normal, except for some calcification on the mitral valve (nothing to worry about) and for mild tricuspid regurgitation. So here I am. Sheesh. I don't know anymore than I did when I started this thread.
  3. Yep, I think that you're right. I found this little note on a website for doing cardiac assessments: APICAL RADIAL PULSE Checks Peripheral Perfusion One Nurse Checks Radial Pulse One Nurse Checks Apical Pulse Normal: Radial = Apical Poor Perfusion : Radial Pulse Deficit From: www01.homepage.villanova.edu
  4. Thanks for the information Kiddonurse. I know that I have some serious heart palpitations that awake me from my sleep and sometimes I get pressure in my chest. I just want to know if it is mental or physical. Whichever it is, it has got to be treated. I don't know which dx would be worse! Tsk! Tsk! The doctor that is supposed to be reading the strip is an electrophysiologist. Hopefully, he'll figure it out. Thanks again!
  5. The nurse didn't say. She just said to keep my 2D Echo appointment. I'm going to be really irritable waiting for that day. It isn't until July 18th. The stress from waiting could make me stroke out! :angryfire I keep thinking that I may have POTS (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome). Oh well, I just have to try and be calm and wait.
  6. The nurse didn't say. She just said to keep my 2D Echo appointment. I'm going to be really irritable waiting for that day. It isn't until July 18th. The stress from waiting could make me stroke out! :angryfire I keep thinking that I may have POTS (Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome). Oh well, I just have to try and be calm and wait.
  7. Well the preliminary report is: Lowest heart rate - 64; Highest heart rate - 141; and mean - 90; and one pvc. No SVT. They have to let a cardiologist read it to let me know anything more. It didn't help that I didn't have any real bouts of palpitations while wearing the Holter monitor. I was told that it could take the cardiologist up to a week to read the report.
  8. Well the preliminary report is: Lowest heart rate - 64; Highest heart rate - 141; and mean - 90; and one pvc. No SVT. They have to let a cardiologist read it to let me know anything more. It didn't help that I didn't have any real bouts of palpitations while wearing the Holter monitor. I was told that it could take the cardiologist up to a week to read the report.
  9. Update: I'm going in tomorrow to get the Holter monitor. I'll let you know what the results are.
  10. To those that suggested that I asked the doctor about a wearing a holter monitor: Ok, I was told to advocate for myself as I would a patient (good advice btw). I called the doctor's office today and I spoke with her nurse and told her about my symptoms; and I asked if she thought that I would benefit by wearing a Holter monitor. She said that she would notify the doctor. I will let you know how this comes out. Thanks
  11. It was Mag Ox. I don't understand why they didn't put me in the hospital overnoc so that I could be monitored. What does your hospital consider a critical magnesium level to be?
  12. Also, it's kind of like "If it isn't written, it wasn't done." Get's nurses in trouble all the time. :stone
  13. Stretched Thin, I'm glad that you made this post! I'm going to print out all of the responses and have my family read it. Maybe, this will help them to understand how I feel, and why it's so hard for me to go all of my children's school functions and stuff. They don't understand the concept of feeling "jet-lagged"! They do understand that they need money for the things that they want! I've got to get them to put 2 and 2 together. It's either one or the other! Thanks
  14. I'm supposed to be getting a 2D Echo done in July. I don't know if that will show a conduction problem or not. It could be done on a day when my heart rate is normal...you know what I mean? Oh well, I'll let you know what I find out. All of the responses have been very informational. Now, I know why we have to check the apical pulse when giving Lanoxin (not the heart monitor, sat monitor, or bp monitor, or radial pulse). They all can be different. As said, the true pulse rate is the apical rate. Doesn't matter if you have two different pulses in bilateral arms. Thanks
  15. I do have problems with low magnesium at times. Once my magnesium level was 1.2, and I was symptomatic. My symptoms were mainly cramping muscles and increased irritability. The doctor just told me to take oral magnesium for six days. My magnesium level went back up to 2.0. Later, it went back down to 1.8 (I was symptomatic then too.). They never did an EKG during these bouts. Weird huh?
  16. Did the doctor say how he/she is going to treat it?
  17. I'm cold all the time. I get this weak feeling. When I get the weak feeling, I'll check my blood pressure and this difference is what I'll find. It just seems to happen when I'm feeling weak. I don't want to call the doctor about it because it doesn't happen all the time, and I don't want her thinking that I'm some sort of hypochondriac or something.
  18. Thanks for the feedback everyone! I knew there was a term for it. I guess that I better make an appointment with the doctor!
  19. I need to be able to take the pulses on my arms simultaneously! When I applied the BP cuff to my other arm, my blood pressure cuff gave a different reading for my pulse. It read 44 on the left arm and 106 on the right arm. Then later it read 64 on the left arm and 88 on the right arm. So, something strange is going on. I just don't know what it is. Could I be having changes in my heart rate that quickly (between the time it takes to move the cuff to the other arm)? And if so, why is the same arm consistently lower than the other? And one more question? What is a narrow pulse pressure? How many mmhg's difference does it take to be considered significant? Thanks
  20. So, you're saying that there would not be a difference in pulses in conditions like Left or Right Ventricular Hypertrophy? Or in conditions that effect the lungs like pleural edema? Or any condition that would effect circulation...like a clot or something? Just wondering? Not trying to be argumentative. Thanks :)
  21. Can anyone help me out here? What's it called when a person has a different heart rate on one arm...i.e. one arm reads 44 and the other reads 88... Thanks :imbar
  22. Have the doctor give you a script for the glucometer, and then go see if your F-I-L's insurance will cover it. All those commercials with Wilford White or whatever his name is says that Medicare will pay for the supplies.
  23. It sounds like "Dumping Syndrome" to me; it definitely should be checked out.
  24. exhausted vs pooped out we know when we took to much **it vs cleaned up too much **it

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