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Powered sofa causing AFIB

Posted by johngoulet 
Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 11, 2025 10:46PM
I was a healthy 63 year old male and began having Bradycardia and pacemakers implanted, After I developed AFIB and still didn’t feel well and had no energy. Three months later I saw a video of electricity being emitted from a powered chair. I checked the internet (over 50 volts impact on the human heart) and found an AI Overview stating that a 50 volt current can cause cardiac issues. Possibly ventricular fibrillation. (Not sure of its validity.) So I used a voltage checker (50-600 AC volts) and the seat, arms and back cushions all tested positive for 50 volts or more. I unplugged the sofa and kept all charging devices away from me. Within 2 days I felt better and after 5 days I could run again. My wife also felt better and our dog had more energy. Now, two months later, I feel great and no AFIB. I workout 1-2 hours a day and run ten hundred yard sprints without any issues. Anyone heard of others having this issue.

I would post the video of my test of the sofa but it’s too large.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 11, 2025 11:52PM
Do you live near an electric transformer pole? Usually they are on the sidewalks unless buried. Ours were across the street and another one 50 feet from my kitchen.

I bought a EMF gadget and saw how much electrical magnetic force it gave off.

Also I don’t use an electric blanket since I have a pacemaker.

Also do you have your home’s electric panel outside a bedroom or a room’s wall you frequently are at? Do you have your modem situated near where you spend most of your time?

I took my EMF (electric magnetic field detector) gadget and took readings everywhere-inside and out, then I moved my modem, routers, and moved my home office that had the electrical panel and worked elsewhere. You may want to consider moving your modem in the inside behind the ceiling and build a ceiling access door for access. It was suggested by my architect during the remodel and with the cable company only moving some cables and getting an outlet behind the ceiling, it was not expensive.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 07/12/2025 12:41AM by susan.d.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 12, 2025 11:29PM
Many powered chairs and sofas do not appear to have the correct insulation on the motor’s and electronics. So the current is released thru the furniture.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 13, 2025 03:08AM
How did you measure voltage on this chair? Did you use a multimeter and place one probe on the chair and another on some nearby grounding point such as the ground plug on an electrical socket?

I ask because if that chair actually has an electrical potential of 50 volts (or greater than zero, actually), I would unplug it and throw it in the trash. I can't imagine how the exterior of a chair which is presumably cloth, vinyl, leather or something similar can have any electrical potential at all. Those materials aren't conductive.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 13, 2025 02:51PM
Are we talking about a Gauss meter reading? I sit in a wired chair, USB and motor for reclining and lifting the neck support, am near a lamp most of the time, or near a computer with large screen monitor....I'm as close to 'wired' as any human on the planet. I have no deleterious effects that could be attributed to a Gauss flux.

Properly grounded appliances of any description, with properly insulated wiring and connections, should send no spurious current or voltage through the user. None.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 14, 2025 01:16PM
Look outside if your electric poles are above ground. I had two-one about 50 feet from my kitchen. I had no cell reception there and it would cause drop calls.

My internet modem was 3 feet from my heart. My bed was against the wall and the other side of the wall was my modem. That couldn’t had been healthy.

My electric panel, attached to my exterior wall to the house, faced the bedroom. For all I know it could had sent spurious current or voltage.

Yes I had a gauss meter.

There may be something to it that magnetic field exposure could affect one’s heart.

[www.who.int]).

[pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov]. (Study came back normal for all groups but the study was only 14 days-is this long enough to develop cardiac remodeling?)

[www.scielo.cl] (long time exposure)



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 07/14/2025 01:58PM by susan.d.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 14, 2025 03:36PM
The first study, now 20 years old, advises physicians to avoid siding with their patients who want some kind of remediation for the EMF they blame for their symptoms. Instead, they are to do palliative care by treating symptoms.

I agree, 14 days was a (shrug, we ran out of money...) miss or some other administrative limitation, and that makes it suspect at best.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 14, 2025 03:38PM
Just saying nobody really knows because there are not that many studies.
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 16, 2025 11:40PM
Interesting. Would love to see that video. Since the file is too big to upload directly, could you upload it to a host site like YouTube, Vimeo, Dropbox, Google Drive, etc. and then post the link here. Thanks.

Jim
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 18, 2025 07:42AM
I'd be interested in the video of the ten hundred yard sprints !

Quote
mjamesone
Interesting. Would love to see that video. Since the file is too big to upload directly, could you upload it to a host site like YouTube, Vimeo, Dropbox, Google Drive, etc. and then post the link here. Thanks.

Jim
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
July 18, 2025 08:53PM
TOM I'd be interested in the video of the ten hundred yard sprints !

It's gotta be the 50 volts coming out of the chair all these years, huh? Maybe just coincidence with the afib episode and recovery? I want one of those chairs!

Jim
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
August 15, 2025 10:51PM
I've explored over the years the impact of EMF (electromagnetic frequencies) or electronic pollution on my body and AFib in particular. I'm really sensitive and have found that the impact is real!

I've brought an EMF consultant to assess my apartment, which was super helpful. He measures different types of electronic pollution and provides ways to mitigate the impact.

My main recommendation is that if you are at all curious about this, to hire a solid professional, for a few reasons.

First, it's a bit like the Wild West out there, in terms of people hanging their shingle without real training.

Second, because it's rather complex, best to have a professional with high quality tools. You can inadvertently end up causing more harm than good.

A favorite mitigation has been using a fiber optic laptop setup. This means that I'm basically not having EMFs pounding into my brain and body every time I sit at the computer. This has really helped reduce AFib.

Jeromy Johnson is the consultant who shared with me the fiber optic setup. He's great! Will consult via email and/or connect you with a local consultant if you need help onsite. His site: [www.emfanalysis.com]

Satya Giordano is based in Northern CA and travels. He analyzed my space for me and is helpful.[emfcenter.com]
Re: Powered sofa causing AFIB
September 19, 2025 08:38PM
Hi Nella

Did you test for static electricity?
It is hot and very dry where I am. When the lights are off at night I can drag my hand across the bed and see light following my fingers. I first thought it was due to the bluebooth to my H10 heart monitor but it also occurs when I don't wear the monitor. I realized it's static electricity.
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