atomic sagebrush
January 26th, 2011, 01:26 PM
Updated 12-29-17
Hey, I know this is a little beyond my usual subject matter, but I saw a question about this on FB and I thought I would write a quick essay for anyone who might be in this situation because heaven knows I have experience!!! :sigh:
EVERYONE who experiences any heart related symptoms should obviously talk to a doctor, but this may help put your mind at ease.
:awe:Heart palpitations and tachycardia - These are SUPER SCARY but super common during pregnancy, and 99% of the time are totally benign. Any time you are physically aware of your heartbeat, that's medically referred to as heart palpitations. You may feel that your heart is fluttering, skipping beats, that you can feel your heart beating throughout your entire body or hear your pulse in your ears, or your heart may race (this is called tachycardia). My heart has beat 200 times a minute for minutes at a time, and it is terrifying, esp. when pregnant. You may feel slightly dizzy or lightheaded while it happens or you may feel perfectly fine.
:awe:Why it happens - your body makes a lot more blood than it normally has to sustain pregnancy, it beats a little faster and harder to pump that blood, and also makes high levels of hormones as well (another time women get heart palpitations is during menopause). All these things can contribute to palpitations.
Some of us actually have a little bit of extra electrical conduit in our hearts that can conduct electricity backwards up our heart and cause tachycardia. This is called SVT (supraventricular tachycardia) and many of us walk around our entire lives with this and never even know. For whatever reason, pregnancy may trigger this misfiring to happen.
:awe:What can you do to prevent it -
You may find things that trigger your heart to act up. Lying down, especially lying on your left side as doctors often recommend that you do, may make you more aware of your heartbeat - everyone's heart skips regularly, but most of us just never notice it. Pregnancy seems to make your heartbeat easier to feel.
Eating sugar, caffeine, anxiety, nicotine, alcohol, being very full, being overly warm, certain medications (even seemingly harmless things like B vitamins - maybe your prenatal??) and even changes in breathing patterns may trigger a palpitation or tachycardia. I've noticed that holding my breath and bending over when pregnant (or sadly when not pregnant too LOL) often triggers my tachycardia, usually in concert with caffeine, stress, or sugar.
If you are experiencing tachycardia, DON'T PANIC. That only makes it worse. I know it is SO SCARY but I have had tachycardia (I have SVT) probably 50 times over the last 15 years and I haven't died yet. :wink: There are a couple of tricks you can try to try to get it to go away. Firstly, you can douse your face and neck in very cold water. This helps to slow down your heartbeat and when your heart slows down it makes it easier for the electrical signal to straighten out again. Another thing you can try is either attempting to go #2 or just bearing down like you are. This is called the Valsalva maneuver and is actually recommended by cardiologists. Even if these two things don't work right away, simply laying down and remaining calm WILL make it go away usually within a few minutes.
OBVIOUSLY you need to go to your doctor and get checked out. But if you're home alone with your kids and having tachycardia, it's not like you can (nor should you) hop in the car and drive yourself to the emergency room. There are a few actual medical situations like thyroid, anemia, and preeclampsia that can cause these problems and so you should def. get checked out ASAP, even that same day if possible. If (after you've had it checked) it lasts longer than a few minutes, you should go to the hospital regardless, because they can give you medication that can stop it and it is hard on your body. And at any point if you faint, feel like you cannot breathe, are having chest pains or pressure or squeezing in your chest, get very dizzy or lightheaded (a little lightheadedness is normal), turn blue/gray (check your fingertips if you aren't sure), or break out in a cold sweat, DIAL 911 right away.
But by far the most likely thing is that this is simply a temporary issue that was triggered by pregnancy and once you have your baby, it will go away again and never return.
:heart:Heart murmurs and valve problems - Sometimes a doctor will notice a heart murmur, or a clicking sound that can indicate valve problems, during pregnancy. He/she may comment on it to you and may want you to have it checked by a cardiologist. DON'T PANIC.
:heart: What are they - A murmur/click is just the heart making an unexpected noise. Remember, your heart is beating faster and you have more blood than you normally do. This may cause your heart to sound a bit different. It may be absolutely nothing at all and your doctor is just being very careful with your health (always a good sign in a doctor).
Some of us have very, very tiny abnormalities with our hearts. These may be things that we were born with or that developed with age. They may be very small holes in our hearts or heart valves that don't quite close all the way. The additional blood flow of pregnancy simply made these very small problems more noticeable. The vast, vast majority of people with murmurs and clicks are perfectly healthy and will live to a ripe old age.
Only a very, very small percentage of people actually have issues caused by murmurs or leaky valves. In practically all of these cases, there is a LOT of advance warning and other symptoms going on, like breathlessness, fainting, turning blue, severe fatigue...most people are aware since childhood of their serious murmurs. For others, their heart valves may have worn out over the course of time but that is normal and takes many years to get bad enough for action to be taken. (I have a mitral valve prolapse and a leaky aortal valve and was given a clean bill of health for a 5th pregnancy). If your doctor notices a heart murmur or click while you're pregnant, it is almost certainly NOTHING to be worried about. It was probably there to begin with and pregnancy just made it more easily noticed.
:heart:What to do about it - You don't need to do anything about it. If your doctor advised you to go get it checked out, do so. Don't be scared about it, don't jump to the conclusion that you're going to die and leave your children motherless. These are very small, usually meaningless findings that will likely have no impact on your future health. They may completely disappear after you have the baby anyway.
Eat right and exercise, that's the best thing that all of us can do for our hearts!!
Hey, I know this is a little beyond my usual subject matter, but I saw a question about this on FB and I thought I would write a quick essay for anyone who might be in this situation because heaven knows I have experience!!! :sigh:
EVERYONE who experiences any heart related symptoms should obviously talk to a doctor, but this may help put your mind at ease.
:awe:Heart palpitations and tachycardia - These are SUPER SCARY but super common during pregnancy, and 99% of the time are totally benign. Any time you are physically aware of your heartbeat, that's medically referred to as heart palpitations. You may feel that your heart is fluttering, skipping beats, that you can feel your heart beating throughout your entire body or hear your pulse in your ears, or your heart may race (this is called tachycardia). My heart has beat 200 times a minute for minutes at a time, and it is terrifying, esp. when pregnant. You may feel slightly dizzy or lightheaded while it happens or you may feel perfectly fine.
:awe:Why it happens - your body makes a lot more blood than it normally has to sustain pregnancy, it beats a little faster and harder to pump that blood, and also makes high levels of hormones as well (another time women get heart palpitations is during menopause). All these things can contribute to palpitations.
Some of us actually have a little bit of extra electrical conduit in our hearts that can conduct electricity backwards up our heart and cause tachycardia. This is called SVT (supraventricular tachycardia) and many of us walk around our entire lives with this and never even know. For whatever reason, pregnancy may trigger this misfiring to happen.
:awe:What can you do to prevent it -
You may find things that trigger your heart to act up. Lying down, especially lying on your left side as doctors often recommend that you do, may make you more aware of your heartbeat - everyone's heart skips regularly, but most of us just never notice it. Pregnancy seems to make your heartbeat easier to feel.
Eating sugar, caffeine, anxiety, nicotine, alcohol, being very full, being overly warm, certain medications (even seemingly harmless things like B vitamins - maybe your prenatal??) and even changes in breathing patterns may trigger a palpitation or tachycardia. I've noticed that holding my breath and bending over when pregnant (or sadly when not pregnant too LOL) often triggers my tachycardia, usually in concert with caffeine, stress, or sugar.
If you are experiencing tachycardia, DON'T PANIC. That only makes it worse. I know it is SO SCARY but I have had tachycardia (I have SVT) probably 50 times over the last 15 years and I haven't died yet. :wink: There are a couple of tricks you can try to try to get it to go away. Firstly, you can douse your face and neck in very cold water. This helps to slow down your heartbeat and when your heart slows down it makes it easier for the electrical signal to straighten out again. Another thing you can try is either attempting to go #2 or just bearing down like you are. This is called the Valsalva maneuver and is actually recommended by cardiologists. Even if these two things don't work right away, simply laying down and remaining calm WILL make it go away usually within a few minutes.
OBVIOUSLY you need to go to your doctor and get checked out. But if you're home alone with your kids and having tachycardia, it's not like you can (nor should you) hop in the car and drive yourself to the emergency room. There are a few actual medical situations like thyroid, anemia, and preeclampsia that can cause these problems and so you should def. get checked out ASAP, even that same day if possible. If (after you've had it checked) it lasts longer than a few minutes, you should go to the hospital regardless, because they can give you medication that can stop it and it is hard on your body. And at any point if you faint, feel like you cannot breathe, are having chest pains or pressure or squeezing in your chest, get very dizzy or lightheaded (a little lightheadedness is normal), turn blue/gray (check your fingertips if you aren't sure), or break out in a cold sweat, DIAL 911 right away.
But by far the most likely thing is that this is simply a temporary issue that was triggered by pregnancy and once you have your baby, it will go away again and never return.
:heart:Heart murmurs and valve problems - Sometimes a doctor will notice a heart murmur, or a clicking sound that can indicate valve problems, during pregnancy. He/she may comment on it to you and may want you to have it checked by a cardiologist. DON'T PANIC.
:heart: What are they - A murmur/click is just the heart making an unexpected noise. Remember, your heart is beating faster and you have more blood than you normally do. This may cause your heart to sound a bit different. It may be absolutely nothing at all and your doctor is just being very careful with your health (always a good sign in a doctor).
Some of us have very, very tiny abnormalities with our hearts. These may be things that we were born with or that developed with age. They may be very small holes in our hearts or heart valves that don't quite close all the way. The additional blood flow of pregnancy simply made these very small problems more noticeable. The vast, vast majority of people with murmurs and clicks are perfectly healthy and will live to a ripe old age.
Only a very, very small percentage of people actually have issues caused by murmurs or leaky valves. In practically all of these cases, there is a LOT of advance warning and other symptoms going on, like breathlessness, fainting, turning blue, severe fatigue...most people are aware since childhood of their serious murmurs. For others, their heart valves may have worn out over the course of time but that is normal and takes many years to get bad enough for action to be taken. (I have a mitral valve prolapse and a leaky aortal valve and was given a clean bill of health for a 5th pregnancy). If your doctor notices a heart murmur or click while you're pregnant, it is almost certainly NOTHING to be worried about. It was probably there to begin with and pregnancy just made it more easily noticed.
:heart:What to do about it - You don't need to do anything about it. If your doctor advised you to go get it checked out, do so. Don't be scared about it, don't jump to the conclusion that you're going to die and leave your children motherless. These are very small, usually meaningless findings that will likely have no impact on your future health. They may completely disappear after you have the baby anyway.
Eat right and exercise, that's the best thing that all of us can do for our hearts!!