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A person I am talking about has a problem of irregular heart beating. The pulse is quite strong, but there is a strong uneveness of the time between the beats (because of which the heart stabilizer was installed and used). After its installation the pulse became less strong and quite even, but the strenghth of pulse became a little uneven. My question is: what kind of medication, if any would you recommend to improve functioning of the heart? Thanks very much in advance!

2006-12-05 04:14:37 · 5 answers · asked by Viktor 3 in Health Diseases & Conditions Heart Diseases

There were conduction problems, which were leading to irregularities I mentioned above. This person had emotional shocks in the past, which had caused heart abnormalities. This person suspectedly had several heart attacks, one of which led to a clinical death. When this happened, this person was reanimated (10 minutes after the heart stopped).
When I talk about "improving functioning of the heart", I mean optimization of its work so that person feels good.

2006-12-06 02:20:33 · update #1

The installed pacemaker is an atrioventricular one. The person suffers from the pace slowering.

2006-12-06 02:27:29 · update #2

5 answers

Before take a medication talk to your doctor about it. If he don't need any he will not recommend any. I have heart beat problems but I have a defibrillator implanted. Also I take toprol xl.......25ml.....one a day.

2006-12-05 04:20:36 · answer #1 · answered by j 3 · 1 0

I'm not really sure what you're talking about here. Irregular heart beating meaning that you have a conduction disturbance or are you talking about an irregular rate? Are you having some sort of heart block leading to skipped beats? Does a "heart stabilizer" mean a pacemaker? Is it a sinus pacer or atrioventricular? When you say "improve functioning of the heart", do you mean increase the force of the contraction, heart rate, or improve conduction? Are you asking about antiarrhythmics?

Either way, you can't get any drug that affects the heart without a prescription. Talk to your doc before you do anything. And stay away from microwaves.

2006-12-05 08:59:46 · answer #2 · answered by janegalt 2 · 1 0

If there is no allergy to aspirin, then a low dose aspirin a day helps to "thin" the blood to decrease the workload of the heart. But, this must only be done with the knowledge of a physician and a record of all medications being taken. There can be serious side effects from certain combinations of drugs.

2006-12-05 04:27:32 · answer #3 · answered by nurse ratchet 1 · 1 0

first I would regulate the body:s ph level by eliminating acidic foods eg all meat and dairy products anything with a face. enzymes are needed coq10 alphha lipoic acid no caffein.juices fresh squeezed minerals from fdirep/catherine click on wellness trax.no fried foods no margarine order super fuel plus from site 2scoops equiv. to 3 bushells of vegies waterwaterwater[alkaline] test at pet store

2006-12-05 04:43:33 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I take what is called Heart Healthy Solutions. These are all-natural supplements. If you are interested in the website, feel free to contact me.

2006-12-05 04:46:39 · answer #5 · answered by JustMe 6 · 1 0

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