Monday, February 13, 2012

Arrhythmia Treatment

Written by

Mr. Muckle

Mr. Muckle

Thu, June 26, 2008

One should be cautious about any invasive treatment, especially those still under development. My wife underwent a catheter ablation for Afib -- with disasterous results. (Adventures in Cardiology)

 

The procedure has been successful in many cases and it may be worth a try, but you must make sure you're going to an experienced center and that the doctor you chose is actually th doctor who will do the procedure.

6/27/08 12:45pm

Hi Mr. Muckle,

 

Thanks so much for your comment. My name is Alli and I'm the producer of this site. I just wanted to say "wow!" in regard to your story. You've really done a tremendous job in documenting your wife's story on your own blog. I haven't gotten through the whole thing yet, but I look forward to reading more. Keep getting your message out there, and thanks again for engaging the community here on this site. Keep it going...

6/27/08 12:51pm

Thank YOU very much. The interesting thing is the feedback I get from Doctors. Half are indignant, and half say keep up the good work.

 

I really do appreaciate your kind words.

 

Dan

8/23/11 9:48am

Treating arrhythmia the standard way (drugs + operations) can be pretty expensive. Of course, in some cases this is the only cure, but in other cases arrhythmia can be cured and can ONLY be cured by following a certain diet. But you have go through some tests first to see if your arrhythmia is caused by a physical flaw in your heart or from other factors (stress, bad nutrition, etc.). How do I know it works? I'm a living example! None of three different pills doctors prescribed me had any effect, but the change of diet did. Read my whole story (along with complete medical documentation) here:

http://www.mcarticles.com/a/how-i-cured-my-arrhythmia-a-personal-story/

Ask a Question

Get answers from our experts and community members.

Btn_ask_question_med
View all questions (6102) >

Health Centers