I had my latest check-up with my favorite cardio yesterday afternoon. The schedule called for a baseline stress test to see if I'm ready to begin rehab, and a consultation. Apparently all the "studying" I've been doing at the gym was good enough. They had me on the treadmill for all of 7 minutes at an easy pace (but a heavy incline. . . ) and all was well. BP went up as expected, with no unplanned drops. Rhythm remained normal sinus. So, I am cleared to start rehab as soon as the orders are entered and they call about the schedule.
We discussed all of my questions and concerns, and agreed that although my BP is higher than we like it (now about 130/90), we will not aggressively treat it. We will add a potassium-sparing diuretic to my morning meds and watch it from there. His rationale is that my heart will be doing a lot of "remodeling" over the next few months, and my BP may actually decrease on its own, once the heart gets "accustomed" to pumping through a normal-sized valve. As long as my BP doesn't go up or become unstable, I'm willing to go along with him.
So, I'm pleased with my progress of late. I could wish for a bit more "oomph" at the gym, but we concluded that if rehab shows me to be hitting the upper limit my pacemaker allows during planned exercises, they will increase the limit. I suspect that the range of 60-130 BPM as it is now set will be too narrow a range, and I may need to upper limit raised quite a bit (used to run in the 150's before). I am willing to leave it as-is to start, and let the rehab folks discover my limitations and discuss adjustments with my cardio and me. Not rushing it -- just want to leave that door open.
My cardio and I closed our meeting with an agreement that the proverbial 3-month hurdle is the point at which I (and most patients) begin to really feel like ourselves once again. To the others in the Class of 2011. . . IT REALLY DOES GET BETTER!
We discussed all of my questions and concerns, and agreed that although my BP is higher than we like it (now about 130/90), we will not aggressively treat it. We will add a potassium-sparing diuretic to my morning meds and watch it from there. His rationale is that my heart will be doing a lot of "remodeling" over the next few months, and my BP may actually decrease on its own, once the heart gets "accustomed" to pumping through a normal-sized valve. As long as my BP doesn't go up or become unstable, I'm willing to go along with him.
So, I'm pleased with my progress of late. I could wish for a bit more "oomph" at the gym, but we concluded that if rehab shows me to be hitting the upper limit my pacemaker allows during planned exercises, they will increase the limit. I suspect that the range of 60-130 BPM as it is now set will be too narrow a range, and I may need to upper limit raised quite a bit (used to run in the 150's before). I am willing to leave it as-is to start, and let the rehab folks discover my limitations and discuss adjustments with my cardio and me. Not rushing it -- just want to leave that door open.
My cardio and I closed our meeting with an agreement that the proverbial 3-month hurdle is the point at which I (and most patients) begin to really feel like ourselves once again. To the others in the Class of 2011. . . IT REALLY DOES GET BETTER!