Heart palpitations due to vagus nerve ?

Posted by shonuff @shonuff, Jan 27, 2025

Has anyone ever had palpitations due to vagus nerve and if so how did you deal with it?

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"If you want, I can make a step-by-step routine that calms the vagus nerve in 5–10 minutes, designed specifically for someone with reflux and mild arrhythmia."

Yes, I would much appreciate you sharing your step-by-step routine that calms the vagus nerve in 5–10 minutes.

Many thanks.

I am convinced my middle of the night high PVC burden is stomach. digestion, and sleep position, though I know I also have 1st degree AV node block and can cause RBBB thru intense exercise or O2 deficit workouts.

Age 73.

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Profile picture for montreal @montreal

"If you want, I can make a step-by-step routine that calms the vagus nerve in 5–10 minutes, designed specifically for someone with reflux and mild arrhythmia."

Yes, I would much appreciate you sharing your step-by-step routine that calms the vagus nerve in 5–10 minutes.

Many thanks.

I am convinced my middle of the night high PVC burden is stomach. digestion, and sleep position, though I know I also have 1st degree AV node block and can cause RBBB thru intense exercise or O2 deficit workouts.

Age 73.

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Welcome, @montreal. I see @ss52 created a list of items to calm the vagus nerve using ChatGPT here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/comment/1545206/

It is important to know that AI tools can sound confident even if they are wrong. The information from ChatGPT may not be accurate or tailored for your health status. Please discuss with your doctor if these approaches are safe for you.

See further guidance on using AI here:
- What is Generative AI? What does this mean on Mayo Clinic Connect? https://connect.mayoclinic.org/blog/about-connect/newsfeed-post/what-is-generative-ai-artificial-intelligence-what-does-this-mean-on-mayo-clinic-connect/

@montreal, have you discussed strategies with your cardiologist about the increase in PVC burden in the middle of the night and the possible connection to GI issues and sleep position?

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Profile picture for Colleen Young, Connect Director @colleenyoung

Welcome, @montreal. I see @ss52 created a list of items to calm the vagus nerve using ChatGPT here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/comment/1545206/

It is important to know that AI tools can sound confident even if they are wrong. The information from ChatGPT may not be accurate or tailored for your health status. Please discuss with your doctor if these approaches are safe for you.

See further guidance on using AI here:
- What is Generative AI? What does this mean on Mayo Clinic Connect? https://connect.mayoclinic.org/blog/about-connect/newsfeed-post/what-is-generative-ai-artificial-intelligence-what-does-this-mean-on-mayo-clinic-connect/

@montreal, have you discussed strategies with your cardiologist about the increase in PVC burden in the middle of the night and the possible connection to GI issues and sleep position?

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@colleenyoung it worked for me and there are articles out there. I only searched it on ai after it corrected my rhythm and I was shocked. Cardiologist need to learn more about vagal nerve affecting heart rhythm and see the impact of gerd and arrhythmia.

Went off to use a PPI and it went back out . It not a prescription drug but it did work.

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Profile picture for ss52 @ss52

This is from chat Gpt good luck and god bless

Calming the vagus nerve can help reduce symptoms like racing heart, anxiety, nausea, throat tightness, or digestive discomfort. There are several safe ways to stimulate or relax it, both physically and mentally:
1. Breathing Techniques
The vagus nerve is closely tied to the parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) system. Slow, deep breathing activates it:
Diaphragmatic breathing: Breathe deeply into your belly, not your chest.
4-7-8 method: Inhale 4 seconds → hold 7 seconds → exhale 8 seconds.
Extended exhale: Make your exhale longer than your inhale; this signals relaxation.
2. Cold Exposure
Splash cold water on your face or take a brief cold shower.
This activates the vagus nerve via the “dive reflex,” slowing heart rate and promoting calm.
3. Gargling or Humming
Gargle with water or humming/vocalizing “ahh” sounds.
These stimulate the muscles in the throat connected to the vagus nerve.
4. Gentle Neck/Throat Massage
Lightly massage the sides of your neck (where the carotid sinus is) or the area just under the jaw.
Can reduce tension and indirectly calm the nerve.
5. Mind-Body Practices
Meditation or mindfulness: Focused attention or guided meditation can downregulate stress.
Yoga or tai chi: Slow movements and controlled breathing support vagal tone.
6. Digestive Support
Eating slowly and mindfully can prevent overloading the vagus nerve.
Avoid very large meals or highly irritating foods (spicy, acidic), especially if you have reflux or LPR.
7. Lifestyle Factors
Adequate sleep supports vagal tone.
Moderate exercise (walking, swimming) improves baseline vagus function.
Social engagement: Laughing, talking, or singing with others naturally stimulates the vagus.
⚠️ Caution: If you have heart rhythm issues, sudden drops in heart rate or dizziness with vagal maneuvers should be monitored carefully. Some techniques like intense bearing down (Valsalva maneuver) can trigger arrhythmia in sensitive hearts.
If you want, I can make a step-by-step routine that calms the vagus nerve in 5–10 minutes, designed specifically for someone with reflux and mild arrhythmia. It’s very practical and safe. Do you want me to do that?

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@ss52
yes. I've been wondering what I had and one ER doctor had me try 'Pantaprazole' and the 'A-fib problem I thought I had slowly got better. When I ran out, I didn't immediately reorder. Because I wasn't sure why and the symptoms came back. I got some more of the Pantaprazole and the symptoms decreased.
Thank you so much. I now know what the problem is.

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What was it? Acid stomach?

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