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Does anyone have any experience they would be willing to share if you've used Kardia Mobile for SVT?
If so, did you have the one lead or the six and did you find it accurate? Did it lead to any kind of treatment for you? Thank you for anything you'd be willing to share and I hope you are now having good health! |
| I don’t have SVT but I have a 6 lead Kardia mobile. My cardiologist’s office recommended to me, more to assuage my anxiety as likely my chest pains were due to anxiety. I almost always have a sinus rythum. If you do it after exercise it will show tachy |
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i used the one lead version 6 years ago to try to track down SVTs and afib; previous cardiologist basically just threw up his hands after a holter didn't catch it during a random week. "i guess just come to the (nowhere near metro or my house) office when it happens?"
i eventually figured out that my tachycardias were triggered by progesterone. anyway, i got a few decent captures, found a new cardiologist, he immediately sent the captures to an electrophysiologist, and i got an ablation a few months later. was 45 at the time. all good now. |
| Yes. I use a watch, Samsung 8 to detect afib and a Kardia to confirm and elaborate. I have the 1 lead card and the 6 lead device. Both very accurate. The information is easy to transfer to cardiologist. |
I will also add that all the above help me to manage my paroxysmal afib. I can see when I go into afib, how high my heart rate it, SVTs, and when it resolves. It wouldn't be useful probably for anyone in permanent afib. |
| Thank you all for your replies, very helpful. |
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Ablation is not a quick fix, it's often short lived- months or maybe a year OR for some, a couple of years. Many often have repeated ablations.There are also risks involved, but, largely, it's relatively safe. It is heavily pushed, however.
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ablation for SVT or afib? we're more likely to develop or have worsening afib as we age, and so an ablation may be a temporary fix. and of course the procedure is riskier the older we are. but if they can trigger the SVTs it's usually possible to treat them. also things like beta blockers can reduce incidence of afib but will have no effect on SVTs. anyway, OP should be talking to an electrophysiologist, not dcum. |