Afib/dangers of eliquis

Posted by nitwit @nitwit, Feb 2 6:41pm

Hi
I’m a fairly healthy adult male of 73. Approximately one year ago I was diagnosed with Afib. My symptoms are rarely noticeable. I’ve never had shortness of breath, fatigue or any other Afib side effects. I have a very good cardiologist who hasn’t pushed any treatments or medications, but has however clearly informed me that going on Eliquis may be a good idea.
I’m very active and all my life have been running daily and have had no issues. All of this Afib stuff and the side effects of Eliquis are scaring the heck out of me. Just how safe is eliquis, and how likely am I to have adverse side effects from its use ?

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Profile picture for activegal @activegal

@koleke
What I’ve learned is that a fib is not a permanent fix. Also catheter ablations vary in quality. The more persistent a fib, the more sites that have to be scarred with ablation. All 6 walls. If you don’t kill off all the electrons firing, the a fib grows like a wild fire over time. Watch utube Dr. Scott Lee, a well known electrophysiologist who treats a fib, “ what the doctors never tell you”. You will learn all about a fib and why you need to treat it well to eradicate it and have lasting results. I’m on a freaking one year wait list and I’m in 100% a fib all the time since it started January 2026. I’m anxious and breathless on exertion….. unlike me. Age is a big factor in a fib start up. Many have paroxymal a fib. Occasional bouts but it will grow to persistent and then permanent over time with worse symptoms if left untreated.

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@activegal
Sorry to hear you are in afib 100%. You’re on a one year wait list for Dr. Lee?

REPLY

No, not with Dr. Lee but he does sound amazing. Looks like I got bumped up …. I kept pushing for an urgent status. I see the catheter ablation lab on July 8. Have an ecg, meet with the cath nurse and then a consult with Dr. Ratika Parkash. She sounds very good…. Does a lot of research on a fib. I had a second opinion recently with chief of surgery in London, Ontario Dr. Michael Chu. He also advised me not to go ahead with valve surgery, saying my valve was too damaged to repair and chords too called and thus the valve is not opening or closing well. So far, surgeons have said wait till I’m symptomatic, pressure over the valve is 10 not 7 as currently because the clock will be ticking once I get a new valve. That’s exactly what they said…. I’ll not be the same and the clock will be ticking! Anyway, with the mechanical problem, even if I get a thorough ablation, it is likely not to hold for long but worth a try! I hope the electrophysiologist sees it as a worthwhile attempt. Still waiting for my second opinion from the Cleveland Clinic. That was paid for through my employee medical benefits plan. It will be a report. I had asked for Dr. Marc Gillinov but turns out he doesn’t do second opinion reviews. Also contacted Mayo clinic ….. they set me up with $ 25,000 worth of tests and appointments arranged over what would have to be an 9 day visit. I contacted them again as I’ve had almost all of these tests recently, many involving radiation and really only want a second opinion re surgery at this point. All this medical navigation is very exhausting but figure it’s best to do now while I’m still capable and not breathless. So difficult to plan travel or for anything I had hoped to do just 6 months ago when I didn’t know about the valve, dilated atrium, a fib mess. Maybe it’s all just a bad dream.

REPLY

Did you know that marathon runners were 2.5 x more likely to develop a fib….. surprised me as exercise is good for a fib. Six months ago I also went into a fib at 69. Very active lifestyle hard core skiing, cycling, weight training, competitive tennis. Unfortunately, Abixaban( Eloquis) is necessary. The chance of stroke from blood clots is much higher. You need to get cardioverted and if that doesn’t hold then catheter ablated asap. Get this done before you are in persistent a fib x 1 year. A fib only grows. I’m in persistent a fib 100% of the time and fairly asymptomatic but I know from research now that this will get worse and be permanent in 1 year with an impossibility of ever getting rid of it. It gets locked in. I have not noticed any bad side effects from Eloquis yet. It’s a lot better than being on Warfarin, which I’ve been on before after valve surgery in 2012. My concern and probably yours is the fact that high risk sports like my favourites are not recommended as a fall or hit can cause a medical emergency with internal bleeding. I refuse to stop doing what I live for but will need to be extra cautious now. I’m also on Metoprolol, a beta blocker that slows the heart…. That and the a fib are impacting me more than Eloquis. Take the Eloquis and get a plan to get out of a fib asap then you can go off Eloquis.

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