constant fast heart rate when moving constant skipped beats on a night?
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I was in hospital 3 days the oher week, with abnormal ecg, basically suffering this problem, they thought my heart was inflamed. I was monitored for three days and my heart rate would be up to 105 laying down, at one point it went to 120, just walking on the ward. They didnt think there was anything wrong, I had echo, stress test which when i stepped on they hesitated to do as my heart rate was 110 befor even starting, it got up to 200 by the end which is way too high for me, im usually very fit, afterward i was nearly sick and went into a cold sweat. Anyway they are going to monitor me for 2 weeks, on the 22nd, but ive found my heart is skipping beats at least 6 times in a row and beats fast straight after, it also hurting my chest, Im getting dizzy aswell at times I certainly cant walk around my heart rate just shoots up. Not sure what to do. Coz im scared of something bad happening. its not normal surely.
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cate2312 joshrandall14
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joshrandall14 cate2312
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joshrandall14
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cate2312 joshrandall14
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joshrandall14 cate2312
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It would be nice to get a name and diagnosis for this.
cate2312 joshrandall14
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joshrandall14 cate2312
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charles62249 joshrandall14
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Charlie
joshrandall14 charles62249
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geoff10274 joshrandall14
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ciaran33745 joshrandall14
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Unfortunately, you are probably at the worst stage of this - when you have a scary heart condition but cannot take meds to calm things down because the medics aren't yet sure what's causing it and will avoid intervention until they do.
It does sound like your medics have captured some of the jitters and patterns already and that is good (it takes years in some cases). They also seem to have a plan in place to progress the diagnosis that should lead shortly to treatment.
Some of your symptoms/triggers sound quite different to mine so I don't know if SVT is the cause. But if it is, it is generally treatable with meds or, if you are a good candidate, can be eliminated altogether in most cases with an ablation.
An SVT episode is very stressful, and this anxiety can create a vicious circle that makes the heart pound harder, but do remember that it is extremely unlikely that SVT will lead to a heart attack. Infinitely more likely is that the SVT will just stop without apparent reason of its own accord.
In order to help them diagnose and proceed to treatment, please keep a diary of the dates/times/durations of episodes and note anything you guess might have been a trigger.... and do not be reluctant to go straight to A&E if you feel it has been going on too long (e.g. for more than half an hour). That's what they are there for!
I'd also suggest you cut out completely common triggers like caffeine (including decaff with has enough to trigger SVT in some folks), and avoid emotional/mental stress as much as you possibly can.
Hope it works out well....
joshrandall14 ciaran33745
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joshrandall14
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cate2312 joshrandall14
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joshrandall14 cate2312
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