I'm fine now -- no, really! But...

I was hauled off to the emergency room by ambulance on Saturday evening. Cardiac event.

To be specific, it was a sudden attack of supraventricular tachycardia. As the EMTs and later the ER cardiologist explained it to me, the heart’s electrical impulses normally fire at the top of the organ. Sometimes they instead fire in the center, at the AV node, and that sends the heart into the fast-beat arrhythmia called tachycardia. What triggers it? Stress can (and I’d had a very stressful week); caffeine can (and I’d had a large mug of coffee within the last hour); it’s relatively benign, a problem with the heart’s electrical system rather than the plumbing, as the ER cardiologist put it. Sometimes it’s a recurrent problem; sometimes it hits once and never returns.

Which knowledge, had I known it when things went kablooie, probably wouldn’t have helped much with the “OMG I’m gonna die!” feeling that swept over me when this erupted. SVT produces a sudden sensation of pressure in the chest rising into the throat, a galloping, tumultuous pulse, with added delights of shortness of breath and lightheadedness – not to mention sheer terror: Is this a heart attack? Am I going to die? Right freakin NOW?

I’d had an episode much like this several years ago, that went away on its own after several minutes, so I tried a few minutes of sitting quietly, breathing slowly, and hoping. Didn’t help. So I called 911, reported sudden onset of elevated heart rate, and was told help was being dispatched right away. They weren’t kidding! As I waited I got dressed from housecoat to top, pants, shoes; fetched a jacket and my purse; stuffed a book (!) in my purse – and in those few short minutes help arrived. Quite an impressive show it was for the neighbors, too – not only the ambulance but also a fire engine and a police car.

The first responders were all wonderful – calm, professional, clearly knew their jobs and set about them with reassuring competence. After taking vitals, quizzing me on this, that and the other, and assessing the portable EKG readings, the EMTs rebooted my heart, and my blood pressure (from 200/100) and pulse began to drop back toward normal.

Rebooted my heart? Oh, yes. Hit the reset button, they did. Specifically, had me hold my breath and bear down in my gut while one EMT pressed hard on my belly – a technique which triggers the vagus nerve, they said, to reset the heart’s electrical system. Bonus: If I ever have another SVT episode, I can try rebooting myself!

Once they had me stabilized, they tucked me into a chair thingie, well strapped in, and carried me outside, down the stairs, and to the waiting stretcher. Kudos to their thoughtfulness in asking me what I wanted done with lights on/off, windows open/closed, and pet care, leaving me free to freak out over what was going on inside without having to spare any fretting for external worries.

Then it was off to the hospital – my first (and I hope last) ambulance ride, which is an experience in itself. They zipped me right into an exam room, no waiting room stays for cardiac patients I gather, and got me hooked up to various monitors, IV-portaled, and queried some more about what was going on. Blood pressure and pulse continued drifting downwards to reasonable levels; the EKG patterns steadied to normal, and after a couple of hours the ER cardiologist decided it was safe to let me go home: “Switch to decaf, take it easy, and see your doctor this coming week,” she advised.

I’ve been fine since then. Will be seeing my doctor tomorrow. Trying to take it easy (it helps that work is much slower this week than last). And switched to decaf.

Oooh, I’ve had that! Only I didn’t have the sense to call 911 until the fifth bout, which lasted fifteen minutes before I gave in. And yes, the fire engine with lights and the ambulance with lights at 10:30 on a school night in a really small town meant every single student asked me the next day what had happened.

My heart rate had settled by the time the guys arrived, but as they were checking me, one of the EMTs said, “oh, yeah, my daughter has you for English. I think she’s getting a C.” And my pulse rate started to pick up. His partner told him to leave me alone.

My doctor threatened me with a holter (sp?) unit. I saw a cardiologist who told me the minimum age to walk through his door was 55, not 30. I got put on a beta-blocker, metoprolol, which no one pronounces the same way, and I’m kopacetic.

My regular doc did tell me when I asked if there was any way to cure it, I could either lose all the weight I needed to or get pregnant, as the rearrangement of internal organs would change how other organs pressed on the heart or something like that. I told him I’d cut out the chocolate chip cookies.

(Glad you’re okay. Those things are TERRIFYING, aren’t they?)

Halter - like a halter for a dog or a horse. Goes around your chest and reads your heart rate while you go about your day.

You’re lucky that you were able to get it under control with a valsalva-type maneuver. I’ve seen cases of SVT where the person couldn’t get it to stop with valsalva and needed adenosine. That isn’t the most fun drug to get since it makes the person’s EKG flatline very briefly (and I’ve heard that the feeling of the heart kicking back into action feels like getting punched in the chest, though it beats the alternative of course). Hope you don’t have any further episodes.

I’ve gone into A-Fib a few times and it was interesting the first time. Now it is a non-event.

Glad you are OK!

Guilty. I know how it’s spelled, I know how it’s pronounced (meh-TOE-proh-lol), and yet my damn tongue keeps wanting move the r, like meh-TROWE-poh-lol). I generally cheat and pronounce it “Lopressor” instead. :smiley:

ETF, how scary! That feeling of sheer terror? Classic for both tachycardia and an MI. In the books, they call it, “a feeling of impeding doom”. It’s purely chemical, it seems - for some people, it’s the ONLY symptom of a cardiac event. Don’t ignore it or try to talk yourself out of it if it happens again!

Goodness gracious, you and another of my favorite people transported for the same thing in the same week.

Please relax, follow your MD’s instructions, and be grateful for the EMT who didn’t rely solely on a portable AED to instruct her/him.

Good luck and good health, dear. You deserve both.

(((hugs))) ETF… you are one of my favorite peoples and I want you HEALTHY!

Take care of yourself please.

Take care, ETF! I’m glad it wasn’t something more serious!

I love that you remembered to bring a book! Glad you’re doing okay.

Don’t leave us hanging - what book did you bring??

That sounds absolutely terrifying and I’d have been stabbing at the 911 buttons immediately, and I doubt I could have stayed composed enough to say anything other than “help, my heart’s really fast!”

Sorry it happened, and glad to hear it all ended well. Relax and follow your doctor’s advice and stop scaring us!

Whee! Isn’t tachycardia fun?

I had recurring bouts of atrial tachycardia, maybe one or two a year, starting when I was about 15. My episodes would last anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours. My mom had it, too, so I knew what it was and wasn’t terribly worried about it, but the “bear down” technique never worked for me, and neither did plunging my face into a bowl of ice water (which was also recommended).

Finally, at 20, I saw a cardiologist who said that while these episodes were not, strictly speaking, dangerous in and of themselves, they would probably continue and become more frequent and harder on my heart as I got older. He said I should either get on medication or have a radiofrequency ablation. He explained that my tachycardia was being caused by some excess conductive tissue which was allowing the electrical impulses to go where they shouldn’t, so basically, they would thread a wire up into my heart and use it to cauterize the excess tissue.

I opted for the ablation, and it was easy-peasy. I even woke up during the procedure, which was fun for me, although very upsetting for the doctors, I’m sure. But according to the wiki, it’s now the standard treatment for SVT, so you might look into it.

Whoa, lots of people to answer! Golly, getting back to you all is stressing me out. Why, I can feel my heart start to race at the mere thought of…

:confused: … :eek:

AIEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE… thudfloptwitch

REBOOT
All right, where was I? Oh, yes – replying to y’all. First, thanks to all of you for (1) remembering me (ain’t been around much lately), and (2) being glad I’d survived my brush with cardiac terror. And now to some particular points:

phouka: Yes, terrifying about sums it up. I too have worn a Holter monitor a couple of times; in my case to check on premature ventricular contractions, an effect of mitral valve prolapse. That’s another of those “benign” conditions that will scare the patooties out of you if you don’t know what’s going on. I could stand to lose a few (well… how about 20?) pounds and this might be the incentive I need to finally make me get serious about it.

Sierra Indigo: I know, “halter” makes so much sense as the right term, doesn’t it? But the thing was named for its inventor:

Hey, 1949 is the year I was born! How freaky is that?

lavenderviolet: Oddly enough, during the ambulance ride, after he’d threaded in a portal catheter for IV access, the EMT told me there were two drugs he could give me – nitro to boost my heartbeat (we agreed, having started my heart rate down toward normal, that seemed counterproductive at the moment) and something else, which he warned me would momentarily flatline me. We agreed we’d hold off on that, too. Now, thank you, I know what he was talking about.

Khadaji: Glad to hear one can become blase to stuff like this, although I really hope that won’t be necessary for me.

WhyNot: Ah, yes, the classic “feeling of impending doom” – what an apt phrase! Given all the heart disease on my father’s side of the family, I tend to pay attention to possible cardiac warning signs.

The King of Soup, PapSett, Cheez_Whia: Thank you! I really appreciate that.

Dung Beetle, Antigen: :smiley: Hey, I never go out without a book – which reminds me, I finished the most recent car book and need to replace it. (Runs off to do so. Picks out Sun Tzu on The Art of War.) What I brought along was Alexander McCall Smith’s The Full Cupboard of Life.

Heart of Dorkness: Wow, recurrent bouts? That’s majorly unpleasant to contemplate. My one previous episode was a few years ago, so hopefully my doctor (I’ll see him later today) won’t see a need to do anything drastic, at least not unless it happens again.

Update, Friday:

Saw my doctor today, and all systems were go; all signs were vitally fine; and I don’t need any further treatment at this point. My tachycardia, based on all the EMT and ER info, is indeed the much less likely to be lethal kind, and unless I start having frequent episodes we really don’t need to do anything. Then we can try Lopressor or some such drug.

Oh, and according to his scales, I’ve lost three pounds since I last saw him three weeks ago (for a discussion of arthritis beginning to twinge in my fingers, sigh). So I must be doing something right.

And now, off to make another cuppa decaf.

Glad all is right!

Were you turned into a newt at any point?

In the ambulance, as it happens; but I got better.

I never go anywhere without The Art of War. (I have a little pocket sized translation with no commentary.) I would recommend it strongly for anyone who should avoid excitement.