Question:
Pacemaker settings ...
— gigi_c (posted on November 9, 2009)
November 10, 2009
Hi Gigi, I dont have an answer for you..but wanted to mention I was just
told I am looking at having a pacemaker very soon. I had no heart trbl
before weightloss surg..but now my pulse is going way to low..am just
wondering how many of us have had this issue? I will keep you in my prayers
and wish you the very best!
— tootsie52
November 16, 2009
Greetings everyone: No, this is not an odd question. I had pacemaker
surgery last February after I had my 2nd Vegas Response (my heart stopped
beating, so I passed out and split my head open on the floor. I left the
contents of my body in the toilet and lots of blood on the floor). It is
my opinion that doctors don't go out of their way to install pacemakers in
your chest. The surgery is very expensive (in my case, the hospital bill
itself was in excess of $38,000). You had a pacemaker installed to help
your heart beat right. I am almost 5 years post RNY. Initially, my pulse
was in the low 40s and high 30s, which meant I was cold all the time,
sluggish, no energy, dragging around, etc. When I had my 2nd Vegas
Response (the one listed above), my pulse was in the low 30s and dipping
into the high 20s. My oh my! I was barely alive! Initially, my resting
rate was set for 60 bpm (beats per minute), and the upper limit was set to
120 pbm. With monthly checks and monitoring, finally last August, my
resting rate was left at 60 bpm but my activity level if I moved at all was
set for 70 bpm (which is fantabulous!) and my upper limit was increased to
140! Finally, I began to feel well. I love the energy. I am warm. I am
energetic and full of life! I will say that it does take (at least it took
me) a very long time to recover from my Vegas Response and the surgery.
Your lack of sleep or not staying asleep has nothing to do with your
pacemaker. The anethetic I was given for the pacemaker surgery caused me
to (a) have 24/7 Vertigo. This Vertigo lasted until May. I NEVER SLEPT.
Why? If I moved my head at all, I became so dizzy. I fell 7 times. If I
didn't have good bones (thanks to my attention to my nutrition and
supplements regime) I would have broken all my bones. I couldn't walk.
The doctor told me I had to sell my home and move into assisted living
because my health suffered so. Then, in May, the Vertigo morphed into
Restless Leg Syndrome. This is where your legs (at least mine) thrash the
bed every night, my feet and toes numb, tingling, stinging in pain,
twitching, etc. My mind 24/7 wide-awake. I do know what you are talking
about with your brain always in gear. You need to investigate what is
keeping you awake. It could be medications (whether prescribed or OTC) or
white bread, or lack of Magnesium in your diet. It is NOT your pacemaker.
Like you, I blamed everything on my pacemaker surgery which was not right
to do. In my case, I got a book (Restless Leg Syndrome), written by Mark
J. Buchfuhrer, MD, Wayne A. Hening, MD PhD and Clete A. Kushida, MD, PhD.
I followed all their recommendations and eliminated a multiplicity of
other-the-counter medications such as Tylenol, Benedryl, Excedrin PM,
Tylenol PM, Meclizine, Vicks NyQuil, cetirizine (Zyrtec), Nighttime
Sleep-Aid, Actifed Cold and Allergy, acetophenazine, acetaminophren, as
well as certain prescription medications. I also eliminated certain foods.
I found an immediate coorelation between white bread and RLS. No more
snitching of white bread! The grief is too intense. My recommendation?
Let the doctors/PA/or whoever does the heart rate testing for you, do what
they need to do. Don't have yours lowered -- you don't have their
experience or knowledge. How much weight have you lost? What is your
food/exercise regime? If you don't want to lose more weight, eat more or
exercise less, or clog up your bowels. (Just joking.) You may need to
invest in "white noise" in your background as you attempt to fall
to sleep. Consider CALM available through Vitamin Shoppe, which has 615 mg
of Magnesium Citrate powder per Tablespoon, which you can add to your
nighttime water/juice. It will help you fall alseep and also regulate your
bowels improving your health, but most important, allowing you to fall
alseep. Also, stop the white bread! Blessings, and let me know if I can
help you further. Christine Gibson, MS, MA, Obesity Help Support Group
Coach, Obesity help Support Group leader, Bariatric University Support
Group Coach, www.ObesityHelp.com/group/BellevueWA, [email protected].
— Christine Gibson
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