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Scared about Ablation for AFib.

Heart Rhythm Conditions | Last Active: Nov 15, 2023 | Replies (39)

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@rubywitch67

Hello catmom! Just got home from the hospital after my ablation yesterday. I have quite the story to tell you, but I have now been awake close to 40 hours and I can barely see to write this. I just wanted to let you know I haven't forgotten you or your questions and concerns. I see lots of folks are chiming in with some good advice that you should listen to. The decision for MY ablation was a real team effort that included my regular Cardiologist, the Electrophysiologists, which is quite a mouthful, so is commonly shortened to just “EP” or heart-rhythm specialist. I'm sorry if I'm sounding like a pre-med advisor now, but it IS important to know that a cardiologist and an EP differ in degrees of specialization. All EPs are cardiologists who have gone through an extra year or two of training after completing their cardiologist fellowship, and as stated before, all that extra training is only in the field of cardiac arrhythmia surgery.. So you definitely want one of these on your team as opposed to a general surgeon! And last, but not least, and this is just my opinion, but I found out yesterday how incredibly important THIS team member is. My EP also had me meet with the anesthesiologist he always chooses to work with. You are going about this the right way, which is to take it step by step seeing each doctor along that path before a decision is reached.....together. AFIB, if that is even what you have, is a very capricious "ailment." You need to be seen by the right people, led by the right people in the right order, to the right decision for you. I have to say that I am a little concerned that your GP has put you on blood thinners without you mentioning any testing beforehand. Anti-coagulants are serious medication, seldom given to people who have not been definitively diagnosed by specific testing protocols. If you ARE on blood thinners, which might only have been one day since you posted only 23 hours ago. I would urge you to call your doctor and discuss discontinuing them until you have seen and been tested by the cardiologist she is going to refer you to. Once you start thinners, if you DO have an arrhythmia, stopping them cold turkey increases your risk of stroke. Please talk to your doctor again, as soon as possible. See if she is can get you on a Holter or Event Monitor for 72 hours so when she refers you to the cardiologist, he will already have a good idea what is going on. I really have to call it a day.....well, closer to two, actually. If I don't sleep the entire day away tomorrow, I'll write you. Please take care of yourself. Linda

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Replies to "Hello catmom! Just got home from the hospital after my ablation yesterday. I have quite the..."

I'm too goofy to be on a computer......that is obvious! My reply was to catmom777, not @afrobin. But now I'm glad I goofed up as I did want to say to catmom777 that you made some excellent points and I hope she heeds your advice. It's good. Linda

Thanks very much for that advice. It was the ER doctor that prescribed Xarelto, which my body didn't like. I do feel trapped. I'm now on Eliquis and I feel almost the same as when I was on Xarelto, but not as bad. I'm very concerned about being on these blood thinners. I feel light-headed and sometimes dizzy and am not myself. A friend had some heart flutters and her doc told her to get magnesium supplements, which worked. She can still drink coffee and wine too. I feel like my world has been turned upside down but she is carrying on with her life life normal. My regular GP says she wants me to get this afib resolved. She knows I hate these drugs.
But, I have another problem that I didn't know about before the ER visit. I have hyperinflated lungs, which is basically COPD. I'm wondering now if my heart was beating so hard because it wasn't getting enough oxygen. I have an appointment with my doc next Wednesday and will ask her for a referral to a pulmonary specialist. One of the symptoms of COPD is heart palpitations. I want to get this addressed. COPD is incurable and progressive, but I need to deal with it. I have never been a cigarette smoker, but was raised in 2nd hand smoke and got serious smoke inhalation four years ago.
It's like a detective mission trying to figure all this out. I hope your ablation does the trick for you. This whole thing sucks. BTW, we only have a couple electrophysiologists here and one of them has a bad rep. so I may have no choice but to see a regular cardiologist. I've heard the one I'm seeing is good though.
Best of luck again with your ablation. Let me know how it goes please.

Hi Rubywitch, Good news that the ablation is behind you. You were so worried. You don't say how you feel besides being awake for 40 hours! Did it go smoothly? I presume it corrected the problem and that you are now on the mend. All the best! Robin