Has anyone's PACs just disappeared?
Mine started randomly in February. I have suffered from anxiety for years. Has anyone been treated for their anxiety and the PACs disappear? Or do we have them forever...
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I was told that I needed an ablation for my pvc's what was your experience?
@713j
All im taking is b12 and d3 supplements
@cmendes2026 Are you asking if it worked or how it all went....a description of the workups, the day of, and then later?
@gloaming All of the above.......:) I am having anxiety about the procedure.
@cmendes2026 Just wanted to clarify, so thank-you. Unfortunately, nobody seems to have chimed in, and I am not a patient with PVCs......................but.......................I have had two ablations for AF...atrial fibrillation.
It's a long day. You get to the cath lab outer hallway early, 0700 typically (so may be an early rise for you and your friend/partner/spouse), you get taken in, change out of your clothes, IV placed in your elbow or wrist, and you wait. Anesthetist usually comes by to chat, ask you if you have questions. Nurse may take blood, give you anti-coagulants just prior to being wheeled into the chilly cath lab (it's cold in that room for the sake of the 'operators' all gowned up). You'll be asked who you are, why you are there, and who is performing the procedure. If you answer incorrectly, a loud buzzer goes off, red lights flash, there are stern and disapproving tsk-tsk's, and you're told to go away and study some more (...kidding).
You're put under with a mask over your face (this might be the worst part for you, try to just relax and do breathe deeply). Next thing you know, you awaken flat on your back, maybe a dry/sore throat if they inserted a TEE down your throat (trans-esophageal echocardiogram tube), and the nurse will caution you, again, to lie flat, don't even lift your head much, relax, and just doze or contemplate life for the next two/three hours to let the incisions clot and plug up sufficiently.
So, a possible sore throat if a TEE, maybe you'll dread the mask when it's placed over your face and you know you're about to be put under, or lying flat on your back for three hours unable to move until the nurse says to sit up, drink, eat, try walking around the ward so see if you can maintain blood pressure....those are about the worst parts.....for me....my experience. Not the drinking and eating and walking....those were a relief and welcome. No, it was lying there.
Oh, soon after you awaken your surgeon will come by and report what he/she could/could not do and how it all went.
Then comes a 10-12 week 'blanking' period where you resume normal life after a week or so of cautious activity, no lifting more than 10 lbs. Two weeks later, 12-14 weeks out, you wear a Holter monitor over night and try to act 'normally', including any exercise/sports to see how your heart behaves. You'll get a report a few days, maybe up to two weeks later.
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3 Reactions@gloaming Thank you!! My anxiety is crazy, but you have helped me out. Doesn't sound so bad....
@cmendes2026 It really isn't...it's just a long day, and as you're being wheeled out to the parking where your ride awaits, you'll heave a sigh of relief and be 'on your way.' Hopefully for years...trouble-free. 😀 If you've ever had a colonoscopy, it's about three times the time-investment, and about the same feeling and 'trouble' as you look back. And, you get a nap! 😀
@muppet7777
Ok thank you. I must have missed read your post. I thought you were taking a multivitamin ? Do you take a B12 everyday?
No but the doc is considering can you tell me how you feel on it. Are you having any symptoms from it?
No but I do believe anxiet can bring on PaC’s. I am not anxious and I still get them with runs of tachycardia out of nowhere on and off all day and night.
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