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Blood Circulation problems?

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  • Haven’t touched anything for 2 weeks now, if even haha. This week I’ve been feeling pretty ill, heart starts to race then I feel cold and get a light head, feeling faint. At night my heart has been going and I start to feel uneasy. So I basically told my parents how I’ve been feeling and they think it could be low blood pressure. Gonna book myself into the vets and get checked out, hopefully they can give me something to help lol. Hope it isn’t going to be one of them problems where I’ll have to get aload of tests done and attend a lot of appointments before I find anything out.

    2 weeks is no time at all really, i’d still get checked out though.

    @Yakuza 561783 wrote:

    Haven’t touched anything for 2 weeks now, if even haha. This week I’ve been feeling pretty ill, heart starts to race then I feel cold and get a light head, feeling faint. At night my heart has been going and I start to feel uneasy. So I basically told my parents how I’ve been feeling and they think it could be low blood pressure. Gonna book myself into the vets and get checked out, hopefully they can give me something to help lol. Hope it isn’t going to be one of them problems where I’ll have to get aload of tests done and attend a lot of appointments before I find anything out.

    i don’t think low blood pressure is what’s causing you problems. Pretty much every pharmacy in America has a blood pressure monitor you can use for free. idk what the situation is regarding these devices where you live (i assume your in the UK), but you don’t need to go to a doc to determine low blood pressure, just go use a machine and if it’s lower than 100/60 then you are for sure hypotensive.

    Either way I hope your health improves.

    Well I went Into the hospital today as I had bad chest pains, sore left arm and cold sweats. They done a heart trace and blood pressure, 125/92 was my first reading the. 117/70 was my second reading. I told them how I was feeling and they just advise that I should take it easy for a while and make an appointment with my GP. That took around 5 hours just to be told that..

    @Yakuza 561858 wrote:

    Well I went Into the hospital today as I had bad chest pains, sore left arm and cold sweats. They done a heart trace and blood pressure, 125/92 was my first reading the. 117/70 was my second reading. I told them how I was feeling and they just advise that I should take it easy for a while and make an appointment with my GP. That took around 5 hours just to be told that..

    could be pericarditis or something along those lines causing the chest pains.

    at least your blood pressure wasn’t alarmingly low or high.

    im not qualified to play message board doctor but I’d suggest staying away from hard drugs and maybe picking up some tai chi or meditation or something.

    Ask them for an EKG if you havn’t had one already, hopefully it will establish that you have normal electrical activity around the heart muscle.

    Didn’t feel well last night, blood pressure was 136/97 :(. Got a booking today for the doctors so hopefully find out something :(.

    So after numerous visits to the doctors, they have put me on beta-blockers, which when I take I don’t feel well at all.
    For around 3-4 hours I feel ill, but the next day I feel okay. I’m taking these at around 6-7pm at night. I admit they take the pain away the next day. I’m not gonna take one tonight to see the differences.

    My EGC came up as -Sinus Rhythm with marked sinus arrhythmia.
    – Incomplete right bundle branch block.
    – Septal infarct, age underterminded.
    – Abnormal ECG.

    I’m going to get a heart monitor on at the end of the month, but tbh the doctors are useless.
    Can anyone tell me what my ECG means?
    I’ve heard that people find it hard to come off Beta Blockers, is this true?

    @Yakuza 562294 wrote:

    So after numerous visits to the doctors, they have put me on beta-blockers, which when I take I don’t feel well at all.
    For around 3-4 hours I feel ill, but the next day I feel okay. I’m taking these at around 6-7pm at night. I admit they take the pain away the next day. I’m not gonna take one tonight to see the differences.

    My EGC came up as -Sinus Rhythm with marked sinus arrhythmia.
    – Incomplete right bundle branch block.
    – Septal infarct, age underterminded.
    – Abnormal ECG.

    I’m going to get a heart monitor on at the end of the month, but tbh the doctors are useless.
    Can anyone tell me what my ECG means?
    I’ve heard that people find it hard to come off Beta Blockers, is this true?

    Hank Gathers was a star basketball player who had to take beta blockers for hyperthropic cardiomyopathy, he stopped takeing them without talking to his doctors and dropped dead during a college basketball game.

    I don’t know how to read an ECG and I doubt anyone here does.

    Sounds concerning though.

    I see, it’s just I’m going to tell the doctor it doesn’t agree with me.
    It makes me feel very ill, weak and gives me a very light head 🙁

    I just want to feel normal again, it’s not untill you feel very ill you know how you’ve taken feeling normal for granted lol. 🙁

    @Yakuza 562304 wrote:

    I see, it’s just I’m going to tell the doctor it doesn’t agree with me.
    It makes me feel very ill, weak and gives me a very light head 🙁

    I just want to feel normal again, it’s not untill you feel very ill you know how you’ve taken feeling normal for granted lol. 🙁

    i was on beta blockers for a while and at first they sucked but then improved a bit. in my opinion you should give them some time and you’ll adjust and start to feel more normal on them.

    having a fucked up ECG and not taking something to treat the symptoms is kind of dumb honestly. see if there are any other viable treatment options if you really can’t stand the beta blockers.

    Thanks, I ended up feeling a lot worse, so I took the beta blocker. I actually can’t express how scared I feel right now. I have to wait untill the end of the month to get the heart monitor which is way too long to wait while I’m feeling like this :(.

    What were you on beta blockers for? If you don’t mind me asking. And what did they do to cure you so you didn’t need to take the tablets anymore? The doctor hasn’t left me in the dark, that’s why I’ve so many questions 🙁

    @Yakuza 562309 wrote:

    Thanks, I ended up feeling a lot worse, so I took the beta blocker. I actually can’t express how scared I feel right now. I have to wait untill the end of the month to get the heart monitor which is way too long to wait while I’m feeling like this :(.

    What were you on beta blockers for? If you don’t mind me asking. And what did they do to cure you so you didn’t need to take the tablets anymore? The doctor hasn’t left me in the dark, that’s why I’ve so many questions 🙁

    i was on them to counteract side effects of an antipsychotic, i got switched to another antipsycotic and was no longer given betablockers.

    @Yakuza 562294 wrote:

    My EGC came up as –

    Sinus Rhythm with marked sinus arrhythmia.
    A sinus arrhythmia occurs when your heart rate cycles with your breathing. When you breathe in, your heart rate speeds up slightly. When you breathe out, your heart rate slows back down. This is also referred to as a respiratory sinus arrhythmia.

    – Incomplete right bundle branch block.
    Explination

    – Septal infarct, age underterminded.
    READ BELOW!

    – Abnormal ECG.

    You’re not going to like this mate, but you are very very lucky you got through it especially not even knowing it happened, what ever you do, DO NOT STOP TAKING YOUR BETA BLOCKERS!

    A septal infarction is a medical condition in which the heart of a human or animal has a patch of dead, dying, or decaying tissue. This is almost always the result of a heart attack, and some medical experts describe it as a wound on the heart. Damage caused by an infarction can be seen most directly during surgery, but it will also usually show up on an electrocardiogram (EKG or ECG) scan, which is completely non-invasive. Once identified, medical practitioners can often help patients recover — but in many cases the damage is more or less permanent. The heart is usually forever weakened because of infarctions, though there are a number of things patients can do to minimize further incidents and to help their hearts heal properly.
    Heart Basics

    The human heart is divided into four chambers called ventricles and atria; two are on the right, and two on the left. The septum is the muscular wall that divides these chambers. “Infarction” is the medical name given to an area of damaged or dead tissue, and a septal infarction happens when the septal wall is damaged. This damage can happen anywhere along the wall’s surface, and can be very big or relatively small.

    A myocardial infarction is a similar type of wound or dead area of the heart, but the difference is that a myocardial infarction can happen almost anywhere on the heart. Septal problems are specific to the ventral and atrial walls. Some experts say that septal infarctions are actually specific types of myocardial infarctions, though this is a subject of some debate.
    Why Infarctions Happen

    In almost all cases, both myocardial and septal infarctions are the result of a heart attack. Heart attacks are very serious medical crises that happen when the heart stops getting oxygen, usually because blood flow has been blocked in one of the major arteries. The heart, like most muscles, requires a steady flow of oxygen to function properly, and the longer it goes without, the more extensive the damage is likely to be. Oxygen loss usually causes muscle tissue to die and be replaced with tough, dense scar tissue.
    How Damage Is Identified

    The easiest and least invasive way to identify this sort of damage is through an EKG scan, which is a test in which small electrodes are placed at various places on the body to detect electric impulses. Having an EKG is a painless procedure that allows the beating of the heart to be plotted, or graphed, on a chart in a pattern of waves. Medical professionals then study and interpret these wave patterns to determine if there are any signs of heart disease or damage. Many factors can throw off the reliability of an EKG, however, so just because wave patterns indicate the possibility of a septal infarction doesn’t necessarily mean there is one. One cause of a false report on an EKG is improper placement of the electrodes; interference with signaling can also contribute.
    Healing and Prevention

    People usually heal from this sort of damage, but in most cases only partially. The heart can’t stop or slow down to rest, and it also can’t be immobilized the way something like a broken arm could be. Septal tissue scars when it heals, too, and scar tissue tends to be rigid and often reduces the efficiency of the heart. As a result, people who have suffered one infarction are more likely to suffer more in the future because the whole structure is weakened.

    There are a few things people can do to reduce their risk of damage in the first place, as well as to speed healing once problems have occurred. Some physical conditions that are precursors to an infarction include obesity, smoking, diabetes, and raised cholesterol. A person with two or more of these conditions runs the risk of clogging up the vessels that supply blood to the heart and, when the heart is cut off from an adequate blood supply, its tissue begins to die very quickly. Keeping active, eating well, and avoiding tobacco and excessive alcohol consumption are some of the best things people can do to ward off this sort of problem.

    Man you really need to take it easy for the time being, so sorry the results came back like this. It suggests keeping active to help it heal and not get worse, but untill you’ve cleared it with the doc that it’s ok I’d try to keep as chilled as possible. No more stims EVER please. I wish you the best of luck and a speedy recovery mate. Just think your self lucky, as it could of been a lot lot worse by the sounds of it. x

    Hopefully the holter monitor gives you better results but it will probably just confirm what is already known.

    like Daft said no stims and take the betablockers

    Oh :(, I have been taking it easy since I started this topic.
    I don’t even drink alcohol now as it makes my heart race the next day, I’ve stopped smoking aswell.

    I just want to get better but I guess it’s going to take a while 🙁
    Thanks for the replies.

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Forums Drugs Blood Circulation problems?