Any Ablation Success Stories?
Hi ... I'm new to this forum and see a lot of postings about ablation failures. Does anyone have a success story about their ablation? I've had two cardioversions due to AFIB and am being encouraged to get an ablation by my heart doc. I am currently on amiodarone until my ablation, at which time I'll be switched to dofetilide for the rest of my life. I hate these drugs because they won't allow me to play tennis (dues to breathlessness and fatigue). Tennis is my passion and joy, and it is a great loss to be without it.
I'm wondering if anyone on this platform has had a successful ablation that has allowed you to exercise intensively without being on an antiarrhythmic drug? I would love to hear about your experience.
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Hi from Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦
My first and only ablation was on May 28 and deemed a success
😁 However, it is my understanding from the electrophysiologist that
afib is a chronic condition unfortunately.
Last month, I wore a heart holster for 72 hours and everything seemed to be good. I have reduced Flecainide from 2 pills a day (50 mg x 2) to one pills per day for a month. At that time, I’m to stop the med and I’ll wear then I’ll wear a heart monitor for another 72 hours to see if I have any symptoms. It’s a process. But, no regrets about taking the plunge and having an ablation.
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2 ReactionsIm 75 no other health problems and I stay busy all day every day. No TV No Computer no sitting. I have lots to do outside What is a TEE and a DOAC. Im not to savvy about that stuff
Thanks!
I am
On Tikosyn and had an ablation. No more signs of Afib but according to my EP the Tikosyn is supportive of a successful ablation. Please do what your EP says to do. Hearing others sagas is helpful but no one here is a medical expert.
Yes, your understanding is correct. Once the heart is electrically disordered, that's it for the rest of the person's life. AF can be strictly limited, even permanently blocked successfully from happening via catheter ablation, but it's still in that disordered state, and contrary to some arguments I keep getting, it IS a progressive disorder (the last 'fact' stated by this expert in complex arrhythmia cases, Dr. Scott Lee, says so... https://www.youtube.com/watch ).
I am happy to hear from a fellow Canadian who seems to have found a good EP who did good work for his heart. Here's to another dozen or more years free of AF!
Hello, from Hamilton.
Glad to hear of your successful outcome. Did you go directly to ablation, or were you cardioverted earlier?
My 1st CV (done without amiodarone, after almost 6 mths of persistent AF on metoprolol) lasted from 24-12 to 25-07. I'll be starting amiodarone soon, for a 2nd CV in Oct.
Not sure how/when ablation may factor in, but I'm a bit apprehensive (probably unnecessarily) of the prospect.
Cheers,
RG
TEE is a trans-esophageal echocardiogram. It's like an rectal endoscope, except put down the tongue end. It's an ultrasound that allows the surgeon to see what's happening close to the wand.
DOAC is 'direct-acting oral anti-coagulant', such as rivaroxaban or apixaban (Xarelto, Eliquis...) They work differently from coumadin or ASA (aspirin), and are preferred due to their action on the clotting mechanism. Patients with occasional or active AF are at approximately six times the average person's risk for their age of a stroke. The DOAC reduces that risk to low numbers like between 1-3%.
https://www.bmj.com/content/362/bmj.k2505
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3556861/
Thankyou very good info for me. Very well explained
Sorry, I'm on diltiazem and eliquis, not flecainide.
Husband had ablation in 2020 and no afib since. He takes Eliquis as a precaution. We believe the skill of the EP is paramount and why some patients do better than others
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