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I should relook at my SNPs Thanks.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Knowing the long memory of health records, insurance companies etc. I would lay off the grass for a week and not tell them a g'damn thing. Anything you say to a nurse or doctor may be one day used against you. I have personal and certain experience with this.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Carey - is that to say that ablations won't work when a parent had AF?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Rats - I thought you were going to say that drinking Margaux cured your AF.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
I haven't but may. The thing that gives me pause is that most of us afibbers are multi-interventional - we'll do anything to try to stop AF so how to weight the information because it happens on both sides. I'm a good example - there are dozens of suspects I can look at it when I first had AF event. Diet pill, adrenal pills, red bull I had a month earlier, coffee consumptioby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Have you had a CAC ?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Lani - low blood sugar triggers your afib? TYby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
How did you convert back to NSR? Meds and dosing ?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Good video from the site you found Colindoby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
It's about time social media started cracking down on these nutcases. Hundreds of posts and blogs detailed why the Bakersfield doctors analysis and statistical calculations should not be relied upon. Here's a sample public health experts were quick to debunk the doctors’ findings as misguided and riddled with statistical errors — and an example of the kind of misleading informatby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - GENERAL HEALTH FORUM
I have a PTH, Calcium and D lab scheduled tomorrow but losing a little hope because # 1 ECV labs mar 25th showed 8.7 calcium so it may not be thisby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Colindo, I've spent some time on this and it still looks like a good place to investigate further. Multiple calcium readings over last 3 years of 9.7-10.0 No PTH labs - apparently not in the standard rotation..... Will be looking into this. Thanksby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Everything you wanted to know about hyperparathyroidism but were afraid to ask.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Pompon - Bruges is like a fairy tail.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
My omron bp meter will report irregularities and I have a couple of dedicated devices that do EKGs or ECGs (what ever is the right term) I am now wondering if those with higher HRV are actually endurance athletes headed toward AF. In 1987, the very first time I put on a wireless HRM it was at the OTC sports physiology lab in Colorado Springs and after walking up to the 2nd floor (at altitby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Colindo Thank you so much - that is the likely smoking gun I've been looking for. Steve Carr also - thank you for opening up this idea. I have to learn what Hyperparathyroidism is and if I have it. What I know right now is T3 and T4 is fine, TSH has gone up and down at just right on the bubble 4.7 ish and Hasihimotos has been ruled out. This is another good place to look. Thby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
No, I am talking about the blatant stupidity of American MDs checking A1c year after year without ever checking fasting insulin as it can predict T2 diabetes decades in advance. (aka diabetes in situ - Kraft insulin assay) HOMA-IR is a far better measure but one needs to be 13 - 14 hours (almost precisely) water fasted only with no coffee (caf or decaf) for 7 days prior to get an accuraby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
George not only that, athletes often also have higher plaque burdens. When I was in training for the 1988 Olympics, I was often tested with lactic acid as high as 18 mmol. That is huge inflammation along with other molecules produced by doing training and racing at 189 BPM for about 52 minutes (40km time trial) and 4km pursuiting with heart rates of 194. Add in 10-12k of calories daily in caby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
How then is greater heart rate variability a good thing in a normal person? When I look at my EKGs I was thinking it was the absence of a clearly defined p wave that made an irregular rhythm afib. Lastly, if the above statement is true is there something of a lesser form of AF but still AF? The reason I ask is that I see a slightly developed p-wave and at those times I am feeling betterby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
I think it's important to differentiate between calcium in plaque (where K2 MK7 helps to shuttle calcium via fetuin a and matrix GLA protein out of the arteries and into bones, as opposed to calcium channels in the heart. I have yet to see any research or inference that menaquinone affects heart rhythms. Things like Tums and all of the -zol drugs aren't good for the arteries (reaby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Jake - the other thing that seems out of whack is the idea of eating 3 meals a day. I would really look into recording your BG levels and getting that fasting insulin checked and then consider low carb and fasting. Fasting is way easier on low carb as carbs beget carbs. What is your weight, BMI, have you had a DEXA scan ?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Jaws - going to need a bigger boat. Afib - going to need a bigger forum. According to the US population projections by the US Census Bureau, the number of persons with AF is projected to be 12.1 million by 2050, assuming no further increase in age-adjusted incidence of AF, but 15.9 million if the increase in incidence continues.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Here I am taking cranberry, ginger, magnesium, potassium, avoiding D, dairy and too little or too much O3 pufa, (plus several other things) and taking MulTaq again and getting ready for ECV # 2 but still in persistent AF. But I keep thinking what if it's something else, like (and just throwing this out because we know it's out there) but from glycophosphate in our food and water?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Isn't what Dr. N does more precise? If I understand correctly he forces afib to happen in real time and then addresses it during the procedure. Is there a name for this compared to run of the mill ablations. If I have to have an ablation I want it to be one and done.by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
Jake - Way too many carbs. Have you used a CGM or BG meter after meals? Have you had your fasting insulin checked? I don't know if my diet right now causes or reduces AF but AF specific changes include; avoiding carbs especially refined carbs that cause BG and insulin spikes, avoiding caffeine and sodas, drinking zero water (removed of calcium), avoiding calcium. For weight loby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
From what I can tell having higher T (or at least not low) might reduce AF. Still early in understanding. As a note quercetin ( a zinc ionophore that many are using during covid has use in male cancers )by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM
I reversed my type II in less than 10 days from diet alone. I then fired my primary who had suggested a month prior for me to go on insulin and keep using his RD's Mediterranean diet of 50% carbs that wasn't working. Fired her too. Hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia are likely the cause of my AF and definitely the cause of my CAC score. All under the umbrella of AHA, ADA, USDAby NotLyingAboutMyAfib - GENERAL HEALTH FORUM
Walt, You stated you have OSA. Are you using a CPAP ? Do you have one of these (see below) to check and alert you should your spO2 level drop too low? Have you had a series of hsCRP labs to see if you're making progress?by NotLyingAboutMyAfib - AFIBBERS FORUM