← Return to Cardiologist suggests I can stop taking Eliquis. Any thoughts?

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@saganjames

I am 79, I got off of Eliquis after four months by wearing a heart monitor for 30 days to be sure AFIB was gone after a successful ablation. I had to push my cardiologist to put me on the monitor. My last vital stats while sitting were 116/66, heart rate 66. After a dizzy event less than 3 months ago, where many tests found absolutely no signs of anything abnormal, my cardiologist wanted me to have loop recorder implanted (standard recommendation I guess). I said no for a host of loop recorder concerns and have been fine as wine ever since. My best research indicated that the probable cause of my dizziness was the metoprolol I took that day. For the past month I have been weaning myself off of metoprolol, will be done this coming week. My numbers have been better than ever since I started to wean off of metoprolol and 81mg aspirin. My outlook is, why do any of this stuff if you feel good and your numbers are consistently good? Everyone is different, but that's my story. Hope this helps. Also, everyone should read Undoctored: Why Health Care Has Failed You and How You Can Become Smarter Than Your Doctor. I'm not saying that doctors are all wrong or all bad, just that you likely have the time to sort things out better than they can for your particular circumstances.

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Replies to "I am 79, I got off of Eliquis after four months by wearing a heart monitor..."

I'm sure you know that there is no guarantee that Afib will not return. The loop recorder gets implanted under the skin and would be set up to alert you or your doctor that you are or were recently in Afib. Myself I purchased a Kardia Mobile device that I use on a daily basis to monitor my heart rate for AFIB. It's not 24/7 monitoring like the loop recorder but I can check my heart whenever I want to. In fact I check my heart rate two times daily. And I use a watch type device that montors my heart for evidence of an irregular heartbeat.