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Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 12:36AM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 271 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 02:16AM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 1,190 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 03:24AM |
Admin Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 6,014 |
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cornerbax
I'm curious and surprised I have never read a post that discusses getting healthy vs. an ablation.
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 05:30AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,941 |
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Carey
but I've not seen a single person here or anywhere else ever claim that they took reasonable steps easily followed by anyone that achieved remission of afib.
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 10:35AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 100 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 11:15AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 4,579 |
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Dean
Thanks Susan d,
I haven’t got time at the moment to respond but I will put the whole journey down shortly.
Briefly, in 2002 my smart GP, after 3 visits to the ER with afib ,sent me to a gastroenterologist and he put me through the ringer with invasive tests. Basically my whole digestive system was stuffed with numerous problems.
If I have any advice for all of you it is to GO TO A GOOD GASTROENTEROLGIST AND HAVE ALL THE TESTS DONE. Your going to the wrong doctors.
Dean
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Dean
To George and other long term posters on afibers.org I am still afib free since 2004. Fingers Crossed!!! I still follow this forum as I am under no illusions it might return.
Dean
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cornerbax
I'm curious and surprised I have never read a post that discusses getting healthy vs. an ablation. Nor have I ever had a cardiologist or EP tell me to focus on a healthier lifestyle. From the beginning I was just told to have an ablation. Because it's known that Afib has underlying causes such as drinking, smoking, being overweight, sleep apnea, lack of exercise, in some cases too much exercise, etc., wouldn't it make sense for anyone who fits some or all of that criteria to focus on lifestyle changes BEFORE an ablation? In some cases i'm thinking a healthier lifestyle may help to correct/reverse Afib.
Regardless of whether Afib is Paroxysmal, persistent, long-standing persistent, it would just seem that Cardiologists and EPs would spend more time talking about health and changes people with Afib can make instead of just an ablation. If any of those "triggers" mentioned aren't corrected, isn't an ablation almost a complete waste of time and money because the Afib has a much higher likelihood to return? I know there's a lot of money to be made via medical facilities/EPs, etc. by an ablation. But if someone lived an unhealthy lifestyle and has an ablation and continues the same, unhealthy lifestyle after the ablation, isn't the ablation completely useless?
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 02:02PM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 97 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 02:50PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 1,190 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 05:32PM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 271 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 20, 2025 06:59PM |
Admin Registered: 8 years ago Posts: 6,014 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 03:11AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 100 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 01:19PM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 97 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 05:23PM |
Registered: 3 years ago Posts: 1,190 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 06:08PM |
Registered: 2 years ago Posts: 271 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 06:10PM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 97 |
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gloaming
That sounds a bit like a Vagus nerve issue, even if temporary. AF can be a problem with Vagal tone and/or with adrenergic response in the heart's substrate.
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 21, 2025 09:56PM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,941 |
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Dean
I went to my Gastro and explained that myself and my GP thought the afib was originating from my stomach as all my afib attacks happened when I was bent over so these are the tests and results he sent me for:
1. Barium swallow test:
I vomit acid. It started after Multaq and I still have GERD after stopping Multaq.Quote
Dean
2. Gastroesophagel endoscopy:
-Signs of Reflux
Thanks. I try to get it doneQuote
Dean
3. 24 hr pH Study and esophagus motility test:
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 22, 2025 02:23AM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 23 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 22, 2025 03:35AM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 97 |
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Re: Getting Healthy VS. Ablation May 23, 2025 04:45AM |
Registered: 1 year ago Posts: 64 |
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cornerbax
Thank you all for the responses, I appreciate it. I don't doubt there are many posts on this stuff but I wouldn't even know the exact title to search to find any of them. And in the 2 years i've been a member here i've never read any posts on this topic. I am asking this because, unfortunately, after 7 months in NSR, i've gone back into arrhythmias. I have some questions on that but that's for a different post. And as many here know, a co-worker of mine passed away recently from an ablation gone wrong so I am definitely not jumping up and down at the immediate moment for another ablation for myself.





