Gunnar wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 7:25 pm
You are my longest standing and most revered friend I have on this forum, and I'm saddened to hear that you are going through this. Though I have nothing in my experience that I can offer that might benefit you in this matter, I am impressed by and grateful for the advice that others here have been able to offer, but even more impressed by your own ability and diligence to research and find information on your own relating to your condition. I hope you find a lasting and satisfactory solution to your problem.
I had no idea that hiatal hernias or hernias of any kind could be related to or cause AFIB. My younger brother has had some problems apparently related to hiatal hernia, which sometimes cause him to have coughing fits (which he hates because, like me, he loves to sing). So far, though, (as far as I know) he has not experienced AFIB. He has cut back significantly on how much he eats, both to lose weight (he was a bit overweight) and help with the hiatal hernia.
Not everyone who has hiatal hernia develops Afib. Your brother likely will never have it. Hiatal hernial is associated with Afib because it irritates the vagus nerve. The typical Afib that is identified in the US is andrenergic. What I have is vagally mediated paroxysmal (happens occasionally) Afib. There is also lone Afib and persistent Afib. Pres. Biden is under treatment for Afib as well as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
The whole ballgame with me at least, is the vagus nerve that pops off the parasympathic nervous system and off I go. There are options for treament that I haven't tried. I use various breathing techniques to cardiovert myself. Sometimes they work and sometimes they don't. It's exhausting to do. Anyway, with digestion if gas builds up or you eat too large a meal, that's what ticks off the vagus nerve and presses on the left ventrical (?) which starts messing with the atria. If you have a hiatal hernia, as I understand it,
that can do basically the same thing and especially if some food gets trapped by the hernia. It's complex and I don't think I do very well at articulating it all. The vagus nerve runs from the base of your neck to your tailbone and interacts with several body systems/organs. If it gets ticked off in the area of the heart or stomach, it can set off a chain reaction. I get Afib with Rapid Ventricular Response. It's no picnic, I assure you.
You mentioned my research. Trust me you have no idea how deep a dive I've done over the years! There are only THREE paper on this produced by the NIH, Gunnar. The UK is so far ahead of us, it's a crime of some sort. Look at the dates on these. One paper contradicts the other about the use of beta blockers.
Please. I can come up with numerous writings about this from the UK and Europe.
I'll pull out some excerpts but notice the date of the discovery of this condition compared to the date of the published papers. The second paper is the one I brought to my cardio/PA who increased the dosage on beta blocker. When I saw him the next time, he walked in with the paper in hand, thanked me and apologized for the increase in medication. I assured him that no apology was needed since the increase proved my theory that the medication was making everything worse and now I had the personal data to prove it. Gunnar, that was 3 years into this journey. Three years of complete misery though I still have my boughts of misery a couple or three times each year, to the point where now I am just fed up with it all. I guess I failed to reach the acceptance stage.
2012
Beta blockers and digoxin are not only ineffective but are contraindicated, as they tend to precipitate the arrhythmia by shifting the balance toward vagal effects on the atria.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5153084/
6/2020
In animal models, VM-AF was defined as AF caused by stimulation of the vagus nerve with observed atrioventricular block, asystolic periods, sinus bradycardia and an increase in heart rate variability 14,15. In humans, VM-AF was defined as paroxysmal AF that occurs with predominant vagal activation, such as, during sleep,
after eating a big meal, or in relationship to other recognized vagal triggers, usually preceded by bradycardia 8,15,16. Patients may have no underlying heart disease or other systemic disorders that could explain the AF 17.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7533140/
12/2020
Rare and unusual presentation of gastrocardiac syndrome
Gastrointestinal pathology can cause cardiac symptoms and disorders. We present a case of a patient who had worsening of her palpitations with food intake. She was found to have a high burden of premature ventricular contractions in the setting of hiatal hernia and gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. After extensive investigations and ruling out cardiac causes, her arrhythmia resolved with the surgical correction of hiatal hernia.
Gastrocardiac, also known as,
Roemheld syndrome is a disorder where maladies in the alimentary tract,
usually the upper gastrointestinal tract, are found to be related to cardiac symptoms. The causes of the gastrocardiac syndrome include gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GERD), transverse colon gas, gall bladder dysfunction and hiatal hernia. Atrial fibrillation is the most commonly described arrhythmia in the setting of GERD and hiatal hernia. Multiple case reports and observational studies have reported these findings, but
gastrocardiac syndrome remains a neglected and underdiagnosed factor in the workup of arrhythmias.1 Since
there is rarely a cause traceable to a cardiac condition, patients often end up getting extensive workup before it can be recognised. Herein, we report a case of Roemheld syndrome in the setting of hiatal hernia and GERD presenting as palpitations secondary to premature ventricular contractions (PVCs).
Ludwig von Roemheld first described the association of cardiac symptomatology with gastric pathology in
1952, which is known as Roemheld gastrocardiac syndrome. He was able to stimulate arrhythmias with an oesophagogastric stimulus.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl ... 20symptoms.
As to my diligence in researching to help myself. Remember what Craig said all those years ago...
Never underestimate the tenacity of a Jersey Girl!
I do the best I can to learn which I am sure isn't enough, but do I try hard with what little brain I have.
Thank you for your reply, Gunnar. I feel exactly the same way about you and I always will. by the way, the 24 year anniversary of my first ever post online (which was to you) is coming up in October. I expect presents!
p.s. I will give you my vagus nerve for a present! You are welcome to it!