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DiscussionPlease any of my fellow PVC Warriors please help me feel better
Heart Rhythm Conditions | Last Active: 15 hours ago | Replies (38)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@kpryor1982 I am not going to say your 500-700 is not an issue for you but..."
@jc76 thank you for all of your information I do exercise. I walk at least 20 minutes a day and I also work on my feet all day seven days a week delivering groceries through Shipt and Spark to people’s homes. I am a single mom at this point and in between getting a new place and living near my ex trying to coparent there’s a lot of stresses in my life for sure but I’ve dealt with these PVCs since I was 22 and I’ve gone a full year without any to really mention maybe one or two here in there I just recently started taking weight loss shots, so my doctor is aware of my hydration packet since I’m not eating that much and to keep my electrolytes balance, which I do get electrolyte panels every few weeks on the shots I’ve lost 31 pounds in the last six weeks and I know that’s a huge weight loss and maybe can be affecting my heart but I noticed my PVCs got way worse once I gained all this weight. I had a premature baby at 28 weeks and spent three months living in a hospital room and I gained 60 pounds out of stress and that was 2 1/2 years ago and I have struggled to get the weight off since my electro physiologist believes that if I get my weight down and exercise more, then I will possibly not have as many, but I’ve had a Holter monitor and a bit monitor multiple times everything from my cardiac MRIs bloodwork to test are all normal every time all of my doctor say my blood work is pristine and my heart is perfect so it’s so hard for me to mentally except that I’m OK especially with panic disorder. My brain immediately goes to well if your heart is doing this that’s not normal because there’s so many people in my life that I know that are like Kim that’s not normal. My heart doesn’t do that and I say maybe you don’t feel it but everybody’s heart does it it’s just I feel every single one. I’m not lucky enough to not feel it. I am aware of every heartbeat in my body and it’s really hard because I mean it’s a good thing that I know what’s going on in my body, but then to feel every single little extra fee is excruciating for someone with my level of panic and anxiety. I do take magnesium potassium supplements which seem to help for those three weeks I had added potassium under my doctors recommendation and that’s what I thought help them go away but now even on the metoprolol, potassium magnesium and anxiety medicine. I still have that terrible run the last two days usually when I lay flat and go to bed, I get a reprieve from them the next day for half a day or so and towards nighttime, they come back, but the last two days have been really taking a toll on my mind and then I want to shut down and not do anything and I lay there and I count the beats of my heart and then I put on a timer and then it’s just so extreme how I start hyper fixating on it so yesterday, though a few things that were a win for me was not going to the ER finishing my workday regardless of how many I was having and still exercising so I called that a win
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@jc76 About 3 yrs after ablation for aflutter/fib I starting experiencing a lot of PVCs/PACs in 2024. Over 20% ofbeats were PAC/PVCs my pcp and EP both echoed what you said ‘everyone has irregular beats no big deal’ but my burden was causing me symptoms like the mom in this thread, I referred to this condition as AFIB lite’
My EP did mention in passing to keep my TSH on the high side - I taken synthetic thyroid hormone due to removal of cancerous thyroid many years ago. After I adjusted levothyroxind dose to achieve higher TSH, the arrhythmia went away. Being skeptical of coincidence I changed back to old dosage TSH came down and arrhythmias returned. Lowered TSH again and I’m arrhythmia free. In reading on articles the link between arrhythmias and too much hormone (=low TSH, so called hyperthyroidism) is well established medical finding. I’m surprised after all these years learning about my condition I never read about this relationship before.