Awesome Niki!!!!!
I can't do anything the easy way, can I?Last night, right after the EP left, my LV lead started causing my diaphragm to spasm with every beat. And I'm not talking a little hiccup, I mean it was making my whole body quake and even the bed was shaking!
We called in the nurse, who promptly freaked out, making me panic way more than necessary. Fortunately she called in the nurse supervisor who calmed us all down, explaining what it was (exactly what Nathan and I had suspected to begin with). They paged the EP, who called in a Medtronics tech to come play with my settings and see if he could get it to stop. He couldn't.
So he turned off the LV lead (fortunately I do have two ventricular leads) just to stop the shaking until the EP can figure out what to do. This morning they took me down (at 5 AM!) to get a chest x-ray so the can see if the lead somehow shifted. If it did (Lord, I hope not!) it may require yet another surgery to fix.
The problem is, my local EP does not feel comfortable messing with my ventricular leads, which may mean I'll be going to MN after all.
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Please pray that the lead has not shifted and that they will be able to solve this quickly and easily today! As of right now, my release has been postponed until they figure this out.
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Ok, I have a question about the diaphragm spasm. Can you feel it? does it affect your breathing or swallowing or anything? Brian's makes his whole body move but doesn't seem to affect anything else.
The spasm is more uncomfortable than anything else. It shakes my whole body and sometimes makes my breath catch. That's bout all. Hope you can figure out what's going on with Brian!
Oh, it's definitely the pacer. When they turn off that lead the spasm goes away completely. Also, the nurse practitioner came through a little while ago and showed us my x-rays from Friday, yesterday, and this morning. The LV lead has definitely moved. Now the question remains... what will we do about it?Niki do you feel otherwise unwell? At risk of alarming you are these spasms definitely caused by a pacing error? Rigors are one symptom of endocarditis. Uncontrolled twitching was one of my early indicators.
Oh, it's definitely the pacer. When they turn off that lead the spasm goes away completely. Also, the nurse practitioner came through a little while ago and showed us my x-rays from Friday, yesterday, and this morning. The LV lead has definitely moved. Now the question remains... what will we do about it?
Thanks, Bonzo, for your concern. Endocarditis is certainly the LAST thing I need!![]()