Souffrant de TVS...

I've been having this since 2011 and it has taken until 4 months ago to have it diagnosed.

It begins with a crushing sensation around the chest, creeps up to the left side of my neck and then the numbness in my left are.

During this my heart rate reaches 179/186 bpm.

I have a spray I use but it's beginning to not really help and all I get from it is a pounding headache!

All these episodes happen when I doing absolutely nothing. During the evening watching TV or when I go to bed.

Never when I'm active during the day, quite bizarre really.

Over the last week or so, I've been getting the odd heart crushing moment during the day (this never happens!)

Today it happened during my work. I purchased a fitbit to monitor my heart beats and today it hit 178.

I'm concerned because when this usually happens, at night. I'm left totally wiped out. But that's ok because I fall asleep and I'm OK in the mornings.

Today, after it, I'm totally exhausted and felt pretty unwell at work.

I'm on medication, Rampril and Bisoprolol.

Just curious if anyone here has this whereby the heart rate soars whilst resting?

Also I guess the reason for feeling so exhausted after it, is because of the high heart rate.

It is common for you to feel tired and worn out after SVT episodes. I have never felt tired after mine, but (1) I'm young, and (2) mine only last for a few minutes. Mine happens very randomly with exercise, never happened when I'm sitting there. If medication is unable to help you to your satisfaction, you can either try to find the triggers causing it (caffeine and alcohol are some main ones, and I personally believe sugar contributes to it), or you could ask your doctor about an ablation.

Hi Patricia. Most often my SVT episodes started when I was just relaxed, sitting down etc. with no known trigger at all, This is quite common. 

I'm not familiar with the 'crushing' sensation you mention. Does it feel like a sudden 'thud' that lasts less than a second, or like something in your chest is being squeezed over a longer period of time?

Je pense que la prochaine fois que cela vous arrivera, vous devriez immédiatement vous rendre aux urgences.

La pression thoracique et la douleur dans le bras gauche pourraient être autre chose.

Si votre médicament ne vous aide pas, vous devriez en parler à votre cardiologue pour changer votre médicament.

j'ai eu une SVT en me reposant.

On ne sait jamais quand cela va arriver ou combien de temps cela va durer ?

Le mien s'est produit à un feu de circulation, en conduisant sur la route, assis sur le canapé, en traversant la pièce, en mangeant au restaurant, et ainsi de suite.

La raison pour laquelle vous êtes "épuisé" et fatigué, c'est comme si vous aviez couru un marathon mais que vous ne l'aviez pas fait. Cela m'a fatigué pendant 2-3 jours après. Le rythme cardiaque élevé fait cela.

Votre médecin vous a-t-il proposé une ablation ?

Le SVT peut survenir à tout moment, n'importe où.

Il peut soudainement se manifester sans avertissement et on ne sait jamais combien de temps il va durer. Quand il s'arrête, il disparaît simplement comme il est venu.

Patricia, my bad SVT episodes occur most times when I'm sleeping, and so I'm woken up from a sound sleep. I started taking my meds at night so it would help with that, and it has somewhat. Other times caffeine, spicy food, etc. trigger it.

Hi Linda

I've been to A&E many times due to this, had paramedics at the house. Problem is by the time they arrive, my heart rate has dropped.

I had a pre assessment this morning at the hospital, in preparation for an ablation. Apparently, the wait is around 18 weeks.

Having said that, I phoned my Dr this evening, she is going to try and bring this forward.

If it's now happening during daytime hours, I don't want it effecting my work.

It's kind of like a huge pressure on my chest really Ciaran, a very uncomfortable feeling. It lasts until the bpm drops, probably between 10/20 minutes. By that time I'm exhausted.

The consultant decided that given the medication is not really helping then ablation is the next step.

I had my arteries checked a few months ago and all was clear

Sorry you're having this trouble Patricia. It doesn't sound like 'standard' SVT. Has your Cardio diagnosed a particular SVT variety and/or another complication?