What test did they do for blockages? If you had a nuclear stress
test that was normal that’s unlikely.
It would be uncommon for you to have angina at a young age
although it’s possible. VT doesn’t usually cause chest pain.
From:
vtpatients@yahoogroups.com [mailto:vtpatients@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Michael
Sent: Friday, July 02, 2010 5:15 PM
To: vtpatients@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [vtpatients] Re: PVC's and V-tach in "healthy heart"
i also have been having left side chest pain
and what seems to be angina, but normal test so far for blockages, could they
have missed the blockages bc i never had a angiogram, and this is what could be
causing my chest pain, angina pain, and pvc's, and the V Tach episodes?
--- In vtpatients@yahoogroups.com,
Michael Cook <michael_cook23@...> wrote:
>
>
> Does it mean since i had that run that my heart is more prone to
ventricular fibrillation and SCD? Do you think it is possible to have this and
it be benign?"
>
>
>
> you can post all of my questions on your website if you wish.
>
>
>
> thanks,
>
> michael cook
>
>
>
> To: vtpatients@yahoogroups.com
> From: laurabakernp@...
> Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2010 20:46:42 -0400
> Subject: [vtpatients] PVC's and V-tach in "healthy heart"
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Hi Michael,
> Here's my attempt at answering your questions.
>
> I'm sorry you're going through this. It is a very scary thing.
>
> I'm a 24 yr old male. Echo, stress test, stress echo, holter, and event
monitors have all been normal besides "PVC's and a 26 beat run of
ventricular tachycardia at 127bpms that self terminated". I seen an EP
today and he said that he thought it to be benign and called it Idiopathic
Ventricular Tachycardia and I started asking questions and he said that just to
be safe he wants to do an EP study next week. Can you explain an EP study?
>
> An EP study is done to make a "roadmap" of your heart's
conduction path. They give you medicine to make you sleepy then they place a
catheter through your groin up into your heart. The catheter stimulates various
parts of the heart and they can determine what part of the heart the arrythmia
is originating from.
>
> Here are some links about EP studies:
> http://www.hrspatients.org/patients/heart_tests/electrophysiology_study.asp
> http://www.webmd.com/heart-disease/electrophysiology-test
>
>
> How safe are they to do? If he triggers a deadly arrythmia can they easily
terminate it and keep me safe?
>
> They are very safe to do as long as they are done in a EP lab with
experienced staff in a center that does a lot of EP studies. You don't say
where you are located. They are prepared for any arrythmia that might occur
during the test.
>
>
> What if he has to do an ablation, how safe is that?
>
> Ablations can be done during an EP study. If they find the area of the
heart where the arrythmia originates from then it can be "burned"
with a special ablation catheter. This is a more specialized procedure and can
have more risk but there are centers that do these procedures all the time.
>
>
> Just how benign is "Idiopathic Ventricular Tachycardia"? Can it
develop into V-Fib? How bad is it to have a 26 beat run of v-tach?? Can you
share your personal experiences and opinions? I also have been experiencing
what feels like angina for about 2 yrs now and thats why I had the whole work
up but all the test for that came back negative. ??
>
> Idiopathic ventricular tachycardia is VT with no known cause in a person
with a normal heart. There are people who have VT who have a normal heart.
>
> Any VT needs to be investigated. You need an EP study to see where your VT
is coming from. Talk to your EP doctor about other tests that may be necessary
such as an echocardiogram, TSH blood test. There are certain types of VT that
are not likely to develop into VF because of where they originate from. It's
possible that is what you have but it's hard to know that without seeing your
EKG. Your EP doctor should be able to answer that for you.
>
> 26 beats of VT is long BUT (and this is a big BUT) at a rate of 126 it is
a VERY SLOW VT which is MUCH less dangerous. Do you have symptoms with your VT?
>
> As for my personal experience- it's a scary story but here it is: http://askthenp.blogspot.com/2010/03/lauras-story-icd-lead-failure.html
>
>
> also found on my copy of the cardionet report it says sinus rhythm with
IVCD (Intraventricular Conduction Delay) and on the Diagnosis part it says
(ICD-9): 426.9 conduction disorder, unspecified. sinus rhythm with IVCD shows
like 3 different times on the report. and 3 different times had ventricular
tachycardia 25 beats, rate 124BPM, all the v-tach reports had 25 beat runs with
the highest rate 125BPM. does any of this offer any additional info for this
v-tach maybe not being benign? does the IVCD pose more risk to SCD or v-fib
with since i had documented v-tach?"
> does that long of a run (25beats) make it dangerous? will drinking alot of
alcohol make my Idiopathic v-tach dangerous? i've been feeling ALOT of pvc's
today, and alot of long runs of them that make me extremely scared, is this
common?? what could that be?
> thank you SOOO much and appreciate your help and opinions.
>
> Sounds to me like you have a definite VT problem without any specific
cause and they need to figure out what the cause is. Once they do that then you
will get more answers. When will you be having an EP study?
>
>
> if they induce V-Fib during EP study can it easily be terminated and
brought back to normal or is there a good chance that you could die from it?
>
> They can terminate arrythmias in the EP lab. Just don't think about it.
It's easier that way. I remember having the very same fear.
>
>
> could it be Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia/Cardiomyopathy? how
would that be diagnosed? would that fit my symptoms of left side chest pain,
left arm pain, angina and the PVC's and VT and other symptoms that I feel? I
have on one of my EKG's it says "T Wave Inversion now evident in Inferior
Leads", what does that mean? ARVD?
>
> I think ARVD is diagnosed with biopsy. Cardiomyopathy is seen on an
echocardiogram.
>
>
> I also have came across some information about "Idiopathic Ventricular
Fibrillation", and "Primary Ventricular Fibrillation" where it
has occured in people with normal hearts, structural and electrical, with
normal echos, holters, stress test, ep studies, cardiac mri's, so my question
is how can one say that PVC's, and NSVT are benign in NORMAL hearts but they
still have these cases of sudden death "v-fib" in people with NORMAL
hearts???
>
> Those people have Brugada syndrome
> http://www.brugada.org/about/about.html?ref=Sex%C5%9Ehop.Com
>
> I run a blog called ask the nurse practitioner (http://askthenp.blogspot.com)
> Would it be ok with you if I posted your question and my response on my
blog?
>
> Hope this helps. Feel free to ask more questions.
>
> Laura
>
>
>
>
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