My new autonomic cardiologist wants to hospitalize me for tests!!!

zzz

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I worked in nuclear medicine and nuclear medicine research for a number of years, so I think I can answer all the questions here concerning radiation.

First of all, nuclear medicine scans are extremely safe. People get scared by the word "radiation", but the amount of radiation involved in a nuclear medicine scan is comparable to that involved in a normal X-ray. Further, the isotopes used in nuclear medicine are specifically chosen to have short half lives, so that they decay quickly. This means that even if these isotopes remain in your body, they quickly stop emitting measurable amounts of radiation. Very small amounts of these isotopes are used, as it doesn't take much to get enough radiation to measure.
I had a cardiac test where they injected thallium:

I actually have had two of them. I was assured that the thallium would be out of my body in 2 days but 10 years later I tested extremely high in thallium. :(

This would not be the original thallium. Thallium 201 (which is the isotope used in nuclear medicine) has a half life of 3.04 days, which means that every 3.04 days the amount of radiation decreases by half as the thallium decays. And when the thallium decays, it is no longer thallium. If all the original thallium stayed in your body, then after ten years, the amount of thallium left from the scan would be 1.72 x 10^-361 of the original amount. (That's 0.0......, with 361 zeroes after the decimal point, followed by 172.) That much thallium would be undetectable by any known means. Furthermore, the body normal flushes out half the thallium in it every 50 days (the biological half life), so the amount of thallium left in your body would be much less than the number I quoted above. The radiation from thallium 201 is undetectable after 30 days. Any high thallium levels you had after ten years had to be acquired from other sources, simply by the laws of physics.
My heart test is a CT scan with dye but no nuclear material. But I researched the lung test (if we do it) and according to which website you read, it involves either "radioactive albumin" "radioactive isotope" or "radioactive gas." I am not sure what the differences are and all sound awful. In my case, it would be to check the lungs, not heart, but I guess the process is similar. Do you know if these substances are the same as thallium or different?

They may sound awful, but they're quite safe. The radioactive albumin uses iodine 131, which has a half life of 8.02 days. Iodine 131 behaves chemically just like iodine, which is an important nutrient for the body. The radioactive gas is xenon 133, which is inert. So once again, there's nothing to worry about.

The dangers of radioactivity come from substances that are toxic (such as plutonium) or that have long half lives. For obvious reasons, neither type of substance is ever used in nuclear medicine. The amount of radiation you would get from a lung scan is less than the amount of background radiation you get from living in the U.S. for one year.

For further information on nuclear medicine and radiation, you can find a good introductory article here.
 
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Gingergrrl

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@zzz Thank you for all the info re: nuclear medicine and radiation. I am still confused, are radioactive albumin, radioactive isotope, and radioactive gas all the same thing? Would all three be used in the lung test (ventilation perfusion scan) or do they just choose one depending on what they are looking for?

I found these terms on-line so not sure if they are involved in the test I might be taking and need to get more info from the doctor. He said the purpose is to see if there are any areas of my lungs that are not getting perfused and to make sure no blood clots.
 

Kati

Patient in training
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5,497
@Gingergrrl it sounds like you got a top notch cardiologist, who recognizes that you are a very sick person. as a cardiologist he wants to rule out diseases that could cause your symptoms. As a registered nurse these tests are not unreasonnable to me.
 

Gingergrrl

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@Kati Thank you for sharing that with me from a nursing perspective and I feel very reassured by everyone's feedback in this thread. I feel the tests are reasonable, too, and am very appreciative for the opportunity. I feel a lot calmer about everything this evening but do worry about having so many tests so close together and how my body will tolerate them (especially all the different dyes, radiation, injections, plus a TTT!) I also worry about what they could potentially find.

It is weird b/c I went into the appt actually worried, what if this doctor falls into the camp of those who don't believe in CFS or minimizes my symptoms (and was prepared for this scenario) but instead he tells me that my exercise echo showed ischemia and that my level of shortness of breath and disability put me in the 25% of sickest patients that he sees and that he wants to admit me to the hospital. It was a lot for my mind to process and I keep thinking, "Wow, I must be even sicker than I thought?!!" but I try not to let the thoughts spiral out of control.

I try to remind myself that he said the exercise ekg portion of the echo can have "false positives" and is not a definitive test and this can still all be from CFS and dysautonomia and if so, he can treat it and I can get better. I flip back and forth between gratitude/total calm to total fear of the unknown.
 

zzz

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@zzz Thank you for all the info re: nuclear medicine and radiation. I am still confused, are radioactive albumin, radioactive isotope, and radioactive gas all the same thing?

No, they are actually three different things.
Would all three be used in the lung test (ventilation perfusion scan) or do they just choose one depending on what they are looking for?

To answer this properly, I need to give a short little course on the relevant parts of atomic physics and nuclear medicine. Please bear with me. :)

We'll start with the periodic table. An element is defined by the number of protons it has in its nucleus. The number of protons is the element's atomic number. Each element has a unique atomic number. For example, hydrogen has an atomic number of 1, helium has an atomic number of 2, lithium has an atomic number of 3, etc. (For hilarious, short instructional videos about the elements in the periodic table, please see the classic The Elements Song, written by Tom Lehrer in 1959 and sung to the tune of the Major-General's Song from The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan, as well as The NEW Periodic Table Song (In Order), which is an updated version of the song, including all the currently known elements, with illustrations.)

All elements (except lonely hydrogen) have a number of neutrons in their nucleus, where the number of neutrons is at least equal to the number of protons. The neutrons are there to hold the nucleus together. How this works gets into quantum mechanics, so we'll skip that part. But as the number of protons in an element increases, the number of neutrons increases even faster, as it takes more and more neutrons to hold the nucleus together.

Although the number of protons for a given element is unique, the number of neutrons is not. Atoms that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes of the same element. For example, two isotopes of carbon are carbon 12 and carbon 14. Both of these isotopes have six protons (as do all isotopes of carbon), but the first one has six neutrons while the second one has eight. The total number of protons and neutrons of an isotope added together are the isotope's atomic weight. Carbon 12 is a stable isotope of carbon; under normal circumstances it will last forever. But carbon 14 is not stable. In a group of carbon 14 atoms, every 5730 years (the half life of carbon 14), 50% of the carbon 14 atoms will have decayed into nitrogen 14, which is a stable gas. When these atoms decay, they emit radiation, which makes them radioactive isotopes, or radioisotopes for short. Carbon 14 is a radioisotope; carbon 12 is not. Due to its long half life of 5730 years, carbon 14 is not suitable for use in nuclear medicine. It's great for carbon dating, though.

Radioactive albumin has the radioisotope iodine 131 as its radioactive component. Most iodine is iodine 127, which is stable. Iodine 131 has a half life of eight days, which makes it very useful for nuclear medicine. (If the half life is too short, the isotope decays too rapidly between the time it is produced and the time of the scan, leaving not enough radioisotope for the scan.)

For a radioactive gas, xenon 133 is used in nuclear medicine. Xenon 133 has a half life of 5.243 days. Xenon is a noble gas, which means that it generally doesn't interact with anything, which makes it ideal for use in nuclear medicine.

For a nuclear medicine lung scan, generally both the radioactive albumin (containing iodine 131) and the radioactive gas (xenon 133) are used; they have different functions. The radioactive albumin is injected into the veins, and is used to show the blood perfusion in the lungs. The radioactive xenon is inhaled through a mask, and is used to show air ventilation in the lungs.

So these two put together make a ventilation and perfusion scan.

Assuming that your shortness of breath is due to the standard dysautonomia found in ME/CFS, both of these tests will come out negative. Your doctor knows this, but is doing the test to make sure that there are no unexpected causes of your breathing problems.
I try to remind myself that he said the exercise ekg portion of the echo can have "false positives" and is not a definitive test and this can still all be from CFS and dysautonomia and if so, he can treat it and I can get better.

This is actually most likely, since you have low blood volume, and low blood volume looks like ischemia on an EKG. Low blood volume can even cause ischemic pain, which is what many of us experience.
 
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taniaaust1

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@taniaaust1 mentioned a PFO. I have one, as do many of us. It is not a big deal and only in rare cases needs treatment.


I was told that these PFOs can sometimes be open and sometimes closed according the the ratios of pressures in the heart chambers.

Sushi

Thanks Sushi for filling in the missing words for me. I think I have a PFO too as my heart tests showed two leaky heart valves which the cardiologist tried to say I must of always had but my 2 other heart investigations in the past never showed that so I dont believe it.

When I then researched the two leaky heart valves I have, the online info said they usually indicated a PFO. Mine must of been closed thou on those days when my heart was looked at (they said I had a little bit of blood backflow). Ive read that in ME cases these can be blasting wide open at times and in some cases can be severe (maybe when we are crashing????) but its still maybe not advisable in us to fix these.

Anyway thanks for what its called.

In your case (if you are comfortable sharing) how did they determine that it was dysautonomia vs. cardiac cause that led to using a wheelchair?

Ive had 3 lots of quite intensive cardiac investigations, 3-4 different types of heart tests each time (but nothing invasive). That's ruled out cardiac issues (thou Im sure they are missing a PFO but yeah they said I must of been born with leaking heart valves and ignored I didnt have that issue before).

The cardiologists Ive seen have been quite dismissive as they didnt really believe in ME (so they didnt believe my POTS or dysautonomia issues either and wouldnt send me for those tests. The cardiologists havent even heard of "postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome"!.

Ive had to determine much of my own medical issues thou self heart rate and BP postural monitoring or apply to join ME/CFS studies for testing to find out more of my issues.

I do have the opportunity for offical dysautonomia testing now but wont take it as they were idiots!!. Ignored that I have ME and when I asked if I could have a saline IV given to me after a TTT, I got told no they never do that (and I know I'd definately would need it after esp since Ive ended up being ambulanced to hospital so many times this year and needed to be given an IV there). They made me out to be neurotic due to that question and just kept going on how TTT dont give people problems.

Im so glad you have doctors paying attention to how unwell you are.
 
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Gingergrrl

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@zzz I have to thank you for another incredibly detailed explanation and I wish I had a more scientific background so I could ask you questions back at your same level!

For a nuclear medicine lung scan, generally both the radioactive albumin (containing iodine 131) and the radioactive gas (xenon 133) are used; they have different functions. The radioactive albumin is injected into the veins, and is used to show the blood perfusion in the lungs. The radioactive xenon is inhaled through a mask, and is used to show air ventilation in the lungs.

So these two put together make a ventilation and perfusion scan.

Thank you and this was incredibly helpful and descriptive. In your opinion, it sounds like I would then be having both tests at the same time, the radioactive albumin (to show blood perfusion) and the radioactive xenon gas (to show air ventilation) in the lungs? Does this mean double the radiation (the injection and gas) or is it all sort of factored in together?

I have never been able to wear one of those surgical masks (always felt claustrophobic like I couldn't get any air) and right now I have significant shortness of breath anyway, so how would I manage it? Do you have to wear the mask for a long time? Do you think the radiation from the CTA (heart scan) plus the nuclear lung test is too much (or does it still seem okay?)

Assuming that your shortness of breath is due to the standard dysautonomia found in ME/CFS, both of these tests will come out negative. Your doctor knows this, but is doing the test to make sure that there are no unexpected causes of your breathing problems.

I am hoping and praying it is all CFS/dysautonomia but neither my new cardio or my CFS specialist are convinced of this. They feel my level of shortness of breath when I try to walk combined with the ischemia on the treadmill test was very concerning. Also, with each month, these symptoms keep getting worse. At the beginning of 2014, I could go to the grocery store myself, lift all items into cart myself, lift bags from shopping cart to car, etc. At present, this is so far from the realm of my reality that it is insane and I cannot lift or carry anything. The doctors are concerned why I have worsened so quickly. My main issue is no longer "fatigue" and I am sleeping well and quite alert and focused. I just cannot breathe while walking or doing any exertion.

This is actually most likely, since you have low blood volume, and low blood volume looks like ischemia on an EKG. Low blood volume can even cause ischemic pain, which is what many of us experience.

I really hope so and that they can figure out how to increase my blood volume, blood pressure, reduce the tachycardia episodes, eliminate the shortness of breathe, and continue to reduce the EBV with the Famvir. I really do not want there to be a completely separate heart or lung problem!

I do have what I would call "Ischemic pain" and it is interesting that you said this can be from low blood volume.
 

barbc56

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3,657
@Gingergrrl

It's great that you found this doctor. Hopefully, you will get some answers and this can be resolved as much as possible.

I have never met a social worker, I didn't like. There are several in my family and I was also in a related profession. Maybe, persistence is related to your choice of profession. Either way, it's paid off. :thumbsup:

If you're not up to posting, is there someone who can post for you? While we want updates, it's important and understandable that you also need to focus on yourself.

Best wishes and gentle hugs.:hug:

Barb
 

Gingergrrl

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@Gingergrrl It's great that you found this doctor. Hopefully, you will get some answers and this can be resolved as much as possible.

I have never met a social worker, I didn't like. There are several in my family and I was also in a related profession. Maybe, persistence is related to your choice of profession. Either way, it's paid off. :thumbsup:

If you're not up to posting, is there someone who can post for you? While we want updates, it's important and understandable that you also need to focus on yourself. Best wishes and gentle hugs.:hug: Barb

@Barb56 Thank you so much for the kind words about social workers and I have to admit that I am an incredibly persistent person! In the past it had been to advocate for my patients, and for causes that I believe in, but now it is to advocate for myself. I hope to be well enough in the future to be able to advocate for PWC's and others with chronic illness.

You asked if I am well enough to post and actually I am and want to explain. When I am typing I am either sitting at my computer or lying in bed with my phone. I am still at home and was told by my new cardio that I will go into the hospital on Tues or Weds. Once I am in the hospital, if my phone/internet doesn't work then I really may have my husband post an update on here for me!

The main issue that is so disabling for me is standing up and walking, especially walking while carrying something, and I get shortness of breath from minor all the way to extreme level that I am afraid I will drop dead. I get short of breath talking on phone but reading, typing and most things that involve lying or sitting are okay. I can still open mail, write checks & pay bills, etc, but I cannot take a container from the fridge and lift it over my head to put in microwave. And each week my level of physical decompensation gets worse which is what is so scary.

So for now I am okay to type, and the connection with others here on PR who really understand has been incredibly helpful for me. But I really appreciate your concern and for checking on me. It was very kind of you!
 

Kati

Patient in training
Messages
5,497
I have had chest pain and shorness of breath, the kind that would happen moving from the couch to the bed. For someone who could run uphill (20 minutes uphill) and talk on the phone, and take a bike ride across the country, I knew it wasn't normal.

Fortunately that kind of subsided and gotten better, though every now and then will experience these symptoms, and i have learnt to take care of myself.

One thing cardiologists should keep in mind is that viruses can attack the myocardium. It's just very important to rule out every possibilities especially when you're this sick

@Gingergrrl may I ask you what age group you belong to?
 

Gingergrrl

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16,171
@Kati

I have had chest pain and shorness of breath, the kind that would happen moving from the couch to the bed. For someone who could run uphill (20 minutes uphill) and talk on the phone, and take a bike ride across the country, I knew it wasn't normal.

Fortunately that kind of subsided and gotten better, though every now and then will experience these symptoms, and i have learnt to take care of myself.

Kati, when you were having chest pain & shortness of breath moving from bed to couch, did you see a cardiologist and get tested? You said that it subsided and even got better and I was wondering if this occurred on it's own or if you had specific treatment? In your case was it determined to be a cardiac cause or dysautonomia? Also, did you take anti-virals or follow a certain protocol? I know you are a nurse (and know a lot more about this than I do!) and am very curious to hear how you assessed and treated it.

One thing cardiologists should keep in mind is that viruses can attack the myocardium. It's just very important to rule out every possibilities especially when you're this sick

I know this is a stupid question but when you said "Viruses can attack the myocardium" is this the same as the term "Myocarditis?" The reason I ask is that I asked my original cardiologist and my new cardiologist if I could have a virus in the heart and they both said no.

I researched myocarditis and most of the symptoms do not match. I do not have actual chest pain (but sometimes have what feels like chest tightness or pressure- what I assume is the exercise induced ischemia?) The list for myocarditis also said "heart failure" which was ruled out for me on the echo and blood tests. I also do not have abnormal arrythmias and I have done three Zio Patch tests (a continuous ekg similar to a holter test but for an entire week) which captured endless episodes of tachycardia and I was told (and have a copy of results) that I have only inappropriate sinus tachycardia and my heart never left sinus rhythm. Even in the exercise test that showed the ischemia, my heart never left sinus rhythm. I also do not have shortness of breath at rest, do not have fever (actually have constant low temp) and do not have swelling in legs or feet.

In hearing all that, does it sound like myocarditis in your opinion? Is there a definitive test for myocarditis? They told me from the echo and other tests that I did not have it but of course now I am doubting everything. Would the CT angiogram show it if it is there? Also, my CFS doctor was worried about Parvo virus in the heart but then I tested negative on three Parvo tests so he felt this ruled out Parvo.

@Gingergrrl may I ask you what age group you belong to?

Yes, I am 43. Thank you in advance for any other feedback!
 

Kati

Patient in training
Messages
5,497
Hi @Gingergrrl I am just shy of 6 years since being ill.

I started having chest pain some 10 months following my initial Epstein-Barr infection. in retrospect my autonomic nervous system symptoms started about 2-3 months before the chest pain and SOB. My symptoms were deemed 'hysterical' by my dr, and I had to insist, be very upset about getting proper testing, which meant EKG, Holter monitor and echo. All of that turned out normal but I felt like crap and the chest pain and SOB weren't going away.

Some 6 months later I landed to Dr Klimas' office (I I've in Vancouver), who performed a tilt table test, for which I met the criteria for POTS, but what is most interesting is that the TTT allowed to reproduce short bursts of chest pains that I had and I could tell exactly when it was starting and when it was subsiding.

I was started on Atenolol and Florinef. However even with seeing a local autonomic physician, he stopped the florinef because he said my BP was too high. He did not perform a real TTT, as he made me stand up from sitting position and he did not keep me in the 'tilt' position long enough (sometimes for ME patients the effects are delayed, so we need to stay on the table long enough, as per Dr Klimas who defended my POTS diagnosis.

My situation has sort of kind of stabilized. I did not feel better on Atenolol however when I stop it (for instance to get certain testing) my symptoms are worse again. I still get some chest pain- for which non-sick people have a hard time understanding. Take just now, I am sitting up and typing at the computer. This is enough to trigger symptoms for me- my best guess is that it requires too much oxygen (blood flow) for my brain. I compensate with doing most of my computer work in bed or on the couch, and this helps a lot, though I know not to push my brain too much. As for shortness of breath, I know I cannot walk and talk at the same time. In fact I do very little talking during the day since I live by myself.

I went to a cardiologist a couple years back who said I had "a strong heart" and dismissed my symptoms. The facts remain that getting health care in British Columbia is pretty much impossible if you carry the ME, CFS or MECFS label. It is unbelievably hard to grasp, and I will fight to the end for dignified medical health care for all of us.

Regardless of my situation, you deserve to receive a proper diagnosis and rule out other conditions and I reiterate that it sounds like you have a caring cardiologist (the second one, not the first one).

I keep my fingers crossed for you, and will be sure to follow your posts. You are welcome to contact me privately as well. :hug:

Edit to add: yes I meant myocarditis. Again, with a condition as severe as yours, all of the possibilities have to be ruled out (especially now since you have insurance coverage)

Edit #2: from my cancer nursing experience, i have never heard of one patient having injection related reactions from nuclear medicine. From my perspective, I know to steer well away from epinephrine at the dentist but this is due to the autonomic aspect of things, and your cardiologist should be aware that this is a problem for us. (Sometimes for the short term but it is also known to trigger horrible crashes, in my case it was 2weeks)
 
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taniaaust1

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Sth Australia
One thing cardiologists should keep in mind is that viruses can attack the myocardium. It's just very important to rule out every possibilities especially when you're this sick.

That's what killed a ME/CFS person years ago now, Cory his name was , I cant remember his last name, he was very young (in his early 20s or something like that and had had ME since being a child). He been doing much better , getting into reliving his life again and then suddenly he was dead (I think he died in his sleep) due to obviously some reactivating virus attacking his heart (during his autopsy, they found he had scar tissue throu his heart where it had been attacked in past too).. I dont think he got warning if Im remembering correctly. His mother used to run some ME/CFS support I think (I think she had ME/CFS too).
 

zzz

Senior Member
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675
Location
Oregon
In your opinion, it sounds like I would then be having both tests at the same time, the radioactive albumin (to show blood perfusion) and the radioactive xenon gas (to show air ventilation) in the lungs?

That's how it's usually done.
Does this mean double the radiation (the injection and gas)

Basically, yes. But it's like having two X-rays instead of one - a front view and a side view.
I have never been able to wear one of those surgical masks (always felt claustrophobic like I couldn't get any air) and right now I have significant shortness of breath anyway, so how would I manage it? Do you have to wear the mask for a long time?

Here's a little info from the NIH that should answer your questions:
Ventilation

For this scan, you lie on a table that moves under the arm of the scanner. You wear a breathing mask over your nose and mouth and inhale a small amount of radioisotope gas mixed with oxygen.

As you breathe, the scanner takes pictures that show air going into your lungs. You'll need to hold your breath for a few seconds at the start of each picture.
The scan is painless, and each picture takes only a few minutes. However, wearing the mask can make some people feel anxious. If this happens, your doctor may give you medicine to help you relax.

Back to your message:
I do have what I would call "Ischemic pain" and it is interesting that you said this can be from low blood volume.

The reason for this is that whether you have ischemia or low blood volume (or both), the end result is the same: Not enough oxygen and nutrients get to your heart muscle. This causes pain for the same reason that using any muscle too much causes pain, where "too much" means trying to get more work out of it faster than it can be resupplied with oxygen and nutrients.
One thing cardiologists should keep in mind is that viruses can attack the myocardium. It's just very important to rule out every possibilities especially when you're this sick

Thank you for bringing this up, Kati, as it's very important.

@Gingergrrl, it's important to remember that all medical students are taught, "When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras." They have this drilled into them, as otherwise medical students would get used to looking for exotic explanations for simple disorders.

Unfortunately, we're a herd of zebras. Some doctors realize this, some don't, but in either case, they don't know what to do with us. So even if you've got the best cardiologist in the country, if he doesn't know ME/CFS as well as a specialist (as he undoubtedly doesn't), you have to make sure that you tell him enough about it so that you get tested and treated properly. I gather that Kati sees this too; she has referred to your cardiologist as "top notch", yet she still felt the necessity of pointing out something he should check for. Kati's a nurse, which means she knows how human doctors really are.

@Gingergrrl, you later said that two cardiologists said that you didn't have myocarditis. Yet myocarditis cannot be definitively diagnosed or ruled out with the tests you've had so far. They're still looking for horses; you're a zebra.

Here's part of a post from one of the many threads that make up the wonderful tapestry that is PR:

The bolding and coloring is in the original. I am pretty sure that what you have is "unexplained ventricular tachycardia", but not 100%. As the original poster says, you can take the paper to your doctor.

This article mentions antibody-labeled scintigraphy as a definitive test, but as this is a 1998 paper, and this test is mentioned nowhere else on the Internet for myocarditis, I don't think it's in use. The only definitive test I know of is a heart muscle biopsy. Here's an excerpt from another message I wrote about myocarditis:
The symptoms of viral myocarditis can vary a lot from person to person, and many people can be completely asymptomatic. Basically, there's no easy way to tell if a virus has gotten into your heart muscle or not. The only way to know for sure is to do a heart muscle biopsy, which is not done in this country as it is a rather invasive procedure.

However, those ME patients who have tested positive for either parvovirus or any of the herpes viruses have always shown a positive result for viral myocarditis when a heart biopsy is done. (This procedure is usually done in Germany.) Furthermore, those ME patients who died while they had an active parvovirus or herpes virus infection were always found to have viral myocarditis when the heart was checked on autopsy.

Because of this, Dr. Martin Lerner, who is a leading ME/CFS specialist who has done a lot of extensive studies of the heart in ME/CFS patients, simply assumes (apparently correctly) that any PWME with an active parvovirus or herpes virus infection has viral myocarditis.

Dr. Lerner's treatment of choice is Valcyte, which works for all herpes infections. You can find his Web site here.

On to your next message, @Gingergrrl...
I do not have actual chest pain (but sometimes have what feels like chest tightness or pressure- what I assume is the exercise induced ischemia?)

The chest tightness or pressure is generally considered chest pain; it's the same feeling people get (to a greater or lesser degree) when they have heart attacks, although that's not what's happening with you. It's also not necessarily exercise induced ischemia, as ischemia implies a narrowing of the blood vessels, and there's no evidence right now that you have that; your symptoms are just as well (if not better) explained by low blood volume.
The list for myocarditis also said "heart failure" which was ruled out for me on the echo and blood tests.

This is actually quite surprising. Heart failure is defined as the inability of the heart to provide sufficient blood circulation to the body. If you have low blood volume, then if you're blood volume is low enough, there's simply not enough blood to provide sufficient blood circulation to the body. This is very common in PWME, which means that you may have heart failure even if your heart is otherwise healthy. Low blood volume is uncommon outside of ME and POTS, and the situation is much more complicated in ME than POTS due to all the other factors involved in ME. Almost all doctors are completely unfamiliar with this picture as a whole - even the good ones.

Dr. Paul Cheney said long ago that we're all in heart failure, meaning all of us with true ME. Dr. Cheney isn't always right about everything, but I think he is here. In our case, the heart failure is caused primarily by dysautonomia, both manifesting directly and in the form of low blood volume. Other contributing factors are mitochondrial dysfunction, since mitochondria make up half the heart muscle, magnesium deficiency, since the heart needs twice as much magnesium as other muscles, and in some cases, viral infection.
I also do not have abnormal arrythmias and I have done three Zio Patch tests (a continuous ekg similar to a holter test but for an entire week) which captured endless episodes of tachycardia and I was told (and have a copy of results) that I have only inappropriate sinus tachycardia and my heart never left sinus rhythm.

None of these rule out myocarditis. For example, from the article Acute pericarditis, myocarditis, and worse! in the journal Canadian Family Physician:
Patients with acute pericarditis or myocarditis usually present in normal sinus rhythm or with sinus tachycardia.

I also do not have shortness of breath at rest, do not have fever (actually have constant low temp) and do not have swelling in legs or feet.
Again, none of these rule out myocarditis. The variations in the shortness of breath have a lot to do with your blood volume; the low blood volume is less of a problem when you're resting, as your body needs less oxygen and nutrients at those times. The fever they're looking for is for a sign of infection. You have the infection, which is EBV; it's just not giving you a fever. Part of the reason for this may be due to immune system dysfunction. The problem with specialists is that by necessity, they tend to have a narrow view of illness, namely their specialty. They have to, because there's too much medicine for anyone to learn it all. But the price of specialization is that they can miss the big picture, and ME is a big picture disease if ever there were one. You just have to keep remembering that your doctors are not experts in ME.
In hearing all that, does it sound like myocarditis in your opinion?

Yes. I'm also going by Dr. Lerner's criteria.
Is there a definitive test for myocarditis?

Yes; the heart muscle biopsy. That's the only one.
They told me from the echo and other tests that I did not have it but of course now I am doubting everything.

I'm afraid that that's a healthy attitude for someone in your situation, especially given what you've been told.
Would the CT angiogram show it if it is there?

Very doubtful. Only the heart muscle biopsy is definitive.
Also, my CFS doctor was worried about Parvo virus in the heart but then I tested negative on three Parvo tests so he felt this ruled out Parvo.

That is probably a safe decision. But as some people have pointed out, the lack of positives on some tests may simply be a reflection of our immune system dysfunction. For example, right before death, AIDS patients test negative for HIV. This doesn't mean that they don't have HIV; it means that their immune system is no longer producing antibodies against it.

And then there's my case. I tested negative for all herpes viruses, yet ganciclovir and Valcyte helped me recover tremendously. How can that be? These drugs (which are actually the same drug when metabolized) are effective only against herpes viruses.

Nevertheless, barring evidence to the contrary, you probably don't have parvovirus, and I wouldn't worry about it. EBV can explain your symptoms sufficiently.
One thing cardiologists should keep in mind is that viruses can attack the myocardium. It's just very important to rule out every possibilities especially when you're this sick
That's what killed a ME/CFS person years ago now, Cory his name was , I cant remember his last name, he was very young (in his early 20s or something like that and had had ME since being a child). He been doing much better , getting into reliving his life again and then suddenly he was dead (I think he died in his sleep) due to obviously some reactivating virus attacking his heart (during his autopsy, they found he had scar tissue throu his heart where it had been attacked in past too).. I dont think he got warning if Im remembering correctly. His mother used to run some ME/CFS support I think (I think she had ME/CFS too).

That's why it's so important to get the diagnosis right, and that's why I think Dr. Lerner is doing exactly the right thing by assuming and treating for viral myocarditis in the presence of ME and active herpes viruses. He's a doctor who knows the heart, knows viruses, and knows ME. His "Better safe than sorry" approach makes a whole lot of sense to me, and simply sounds like good medicine.
 
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Gingergrrl

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Gingergrrl[/USER] I am just shy of 6 years since being ill. I started having chest pain some 10 months following my initial Epstein-Barr infection. in retrospect my autonomic nervous system symptoms started about 2-3 months before the chest pain and SOB. My symptoms were deemed 'hysterical' by my dr, and I had to insist, be very upset about getting proper testing, which meant EKG, Holter monitor and echo. All of that turned out normal but I felt like crap and the chest pain and SOB weren't going away.

@Kati Your situation is very similar to mine as I also started having autonomic and cardiac symptoms about 10 months after mono/EBV. I am so sorry you have been ill for six years. My mono was in March/April 2012. My initial cardiologist identified me as having Inappropriate Sinus Tachycardia (IST) and referred me to the second one who is a heart rhythm specialist. Since then I've had three Zio Patch tests (over the course of a year and a half) which in total add up to about three weeks of continuous cardiac EKG monitoring. The test captured episodes where my HR went as high as 177 bmp (which thank God no longer happens) but even in those episodes my HR never left sinus rhythm. My second cardio (who missed the ischemia on the exercise echo) then diagnosed me with "Autonomic instability" and referred me to the third cardio (Dr. C) who specializes in autonomic stuff and is about to hospitalize me. So, I feel I am finally on the right track to get some proper testing.

Some 6 months later I landed to Dr Klimas' office (I I've in Vancouver), who performed a tilt table test, for which I met the criteria for POTS, but what is most interesting is that the TTT allowed to reproduce short bursts of chest pains that I had and I could tell exactly when it was starting and when it was subsiding.

Good for you to flying all the way to see Dr. Klimas and I can see that you are very persistent like I am! The fact that the TTT was able to reproduce your symptoms is re-assuring to me and my new cardio said he will be in the room during my TTT so this test can potentially be very helpful and re-assures me that I do need to try it. He already said I have POTS but my episodes of POTS are very inconsistent and do not happen every time I stand up.

I was started on Atenolol and Florinef. However even with seeing a local autonomic physician, he stopped the florinef because he said my BP was too high. He did not perform a real TTT, as he made me stand up from sitting position and he did not keep me in the 'tilt' position long enough (sometimes for ME patients the effects are delayed, so we need to stay on the table long enough, as per Dr Klimas who defended my POTS diagnosis.

I also currently take Atenolol and Florinef but in my case, even on the Florinef my BP is low. The Atenolol helps me greatly but I honestly am not sure if the Florinef is doing anything and I am only able to tolerate a small dose.

My situation has sort of kind of stabilized. I did not feel better on Atenolol however when I stop it (for instance to get certain testing) my symptoms are worse again. I still get some chest pain- for which non-sick people have a hard time understanding. Take just now, I am sitting up and typing at the computer. This is enough to trigger symptoms for me- my best guess is that it requires too much oxygen (blood flow) for my brain. I compensate with doing most of my computer work in bed or on the couch, and this helps a lot, though I know not to push my brain too much. As for shortness of breath, I know I cannot walk and talk at the same time. In fact I do very little talking during the day since I live by myself.

I am still worried about you if sitting at the computer is enough to trigger cardiac symptoms for you. Are you still seeing Dr. Klimas or being monitored? I am actually okay sitting at the computer and my problems involve walking. I have trouble walking and talking at the same time (as you mentioned) and in my case, I live with other people so I do have to talk a lot more.

I went to a cardiologist a couple years back who said I had "a strong heart" and dismissed my symptoms. The facts remain that getting health care in British Columbia is pretty much impossible if you carry the ME, CFS or MECFS label. It is unbelievably hard to grasp, and I will fight to the end for dignified medical health care for all of us.

I am so sorry and wish all you guys in Canada and the UK had a way to get better health care. I used to think that you guys had far superior systems than we did in the US, b/c insurance was not tied to your employer and everyone had access to care, but I have changed my position on that since joining PR (but that is another issue and I don't want to get off topic!)

Regardless of my situation, you deserve to receive a proper diagnosis and rule out other conditions and I reiterate that it sounds like you have a caring cardiologist (the second one, not the first one). I keep my fingers crossed for you, and will be sure to follow your posts. You are welcome to contact me privately as well. :hug:

Thank you so much, Kati, and if anything from my testing can help you or others on PR in the future, it makes me incredibly happy and this is why I am sharing so much info. My new cardio is extremely caring and I also feel he is very smart and open-minded. I will also send you a PM and appreciate all your support.

Edit to add: yes I meant myocarditis. Again, with a condition as severe as yours, all of the possibilities have to be ruled out (especially now since you have insurance coverage)

Thank you and I thought that was what you meant. From @zzz's post (which I will answer later) he said that the only way to confirm myocarditis is from a heart biopsy which is not performed in the US (plus, I would not want one as that is incredibly invasive and scary!!!) From your nursing experience, how were patients diagnosed and treated for myocarditis? I will definitely pursue this issue with my new cardio and he is supposed to call me today to tell me which day I go into the hospital (at the earliest being tomorrow.)

Edit #2: from my cancer nursing experience, i have never heard of one patient having injection related reactions from nuclear medicine. From my perspective, I know to steer well away from epinephrine at the dentist but this is due to the autonomic aspect of things, and your cardiologist should be aware that this is a problem for us. (Sometimes for the short term but it is also known to trigger horrible crashes, in my case it was 2weeks)

Thanks and I am less worried about the dye for the CT scan and the nuclear stuff now. I have also had bad reactions from epinephrine at the dentist (even 10 years ago when I was totally healthy) and absolutely will not be having any epinephrine. I did worry that the injection for the ACTH stim test could be like epinephrine (in re: to what symptoms it produces) but my cardio said he has not seen this reaction and if it happens, they will give me IV beta blockers.
 

Gingergrrl

Senior Member
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16,171
Ive been injected with radioactive stuff twice now for some scans (Ive had MRIs and all kinds of scans done in past), and was fine (but dental injections are a whole other story).

@Tania Thank you and that is re-assuring as I know we both have some similar issues with POTS and low blood volume. I am glad that you did not have any negative reaction from the radioactive scans. And believe me, I will not allow any injections with epinephrine!

That's what killed a ME/CFS person years ago now, Cory his name was , I cant remember his last name, he was very young (in his early 20s or something like that and had had ME since being a child). He been doing much better, getting into reliving his life again and then suddenly he was dead (I think he died in his sleep) due to obviously some reactivating virus attacking his heart (during his autopsy, they found he had scar tissue throu his heart where it had been attacked in past too). I dont think he got warning if Im remembering correctly. His mother used to run some ME/CFS support I think (I think she had ME/CFS too).

That is very scary!!! I am trying to just tell myself that we really don't know how my situation compares to his and not dwell on it or my anxiety will take over.
 

Gingergrrl

Senior Member
Messages
16,171
@zzz

Thank you for the additional info on the lung test and it makes sense. Hopefully I will tolerate wearing the mask and the test will be fast!

@Gingergrrl, it's important to remember that all medical students are taught, "When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras." They have this drilled into them, as otherwise medical students would get used to looking for exotic explanations for simple disorders. Unfortunately, we're a herd of zebras.

I agree that we are zebras and that is why I continue to do my research and see specialists until I find the ones who can help me.

Some doctors realize this, some don't, but in either case, they don't know what to do with us. So even if you've got the best cardiologist in the country, if he doesn't know ME/CFS as well as a specialist (as he undoubtedly doesn't), you have to make sure that you tell him enough about it so that you get tested and treated properly. I gather that Kati sees this too; she has referred to your cardiologist as "top notch", yet she still felt the necessity of pointing out something he should check for. Kati's a nurse, which means she knows how human doctors really are.

I definitely told Dr. C about having CFS from EBV and he does have familiarity with it. I also told my CFS specialist what tests I will be having and he was thrilled and thought they were all very appropriate and the two will be speaking to each other. I am similar to Kati in that as a medical/psychiatric social worker, I worked with doctors every day for 12 years so I know they are just human beings and not perfect.


@zzz, This is the first point where I have to disagree with you and the three Zio Patch studies that I did definitely ruled out that I do not have ventricular tachycardia. That is one of the most deadly arrythmias a person can have and my studies (written up by experts) said I had zero episodes of v-tach and zero episodes of any arrythmia and my heart never left sinus rhythm in three weeks of continuous EKG monitoring (and this was during my worst episodes of tachycardia- which were much worse than my current situation.) My HR at that time was going into the 170's multiple times a day and my hands and arms would become numb/tingling and this is completely gone. Even during those episodes which were captured on Zio Patch, my heart was in sinus rhythm and not v-tach. So, we have to disagree here!

@zzz, For some reason, I cannot get the rest of your message to copy down to this current box and I have tried it about three different ways :mad:. So I am scrolling back and forth to that message and copying individually what will copy and will try to address your other points from memory!

One of the reasons my new cardio wants the CTA test is to rule out that there really is not an ischemia due to my family history of heart disease (I had two uncles who died of heart disease, one died instantly of a heart attack at age 46.) So, I don't think I can say definitively that there is no evidence that I do not have ischemia when my exercise ekg said that I did. I know that low blood volume is an alternate or co-morbid explanation and I plan to pursue this as well. If low blood volume is the full answer, that will be a relief but I don't think I can assume it is at this point without the testing?!
Again, none of these rule out myocarditis. The variations in the shortness of breath have a lot to do with your blood volume; the low blood volume is less of a problem when you're resting, as your body needs less oxygen and nutrients at those times. The fever they're looking for is for a sign of infection. You have the infection, which is EBV; it's just not giving you a fever. Part of the reason for this may be due to immune system dysfunction. The problem with specialists is that by necessity, they tend to have a narrow view of illness, namely their specialty. They have to, because there's too much medicine for anyone to learn it all. But the price of specialization is that they can miss the big picture, and ME is a big picture disease if ever there were one. You just have to keep remembering that your doctors are not experts in ME.

I appreciate everything you are saying but I have an ME specialist who does see the bigger picture of ME/CFS and he also does not feel that I have myocarditis. He is fully on board for the tests that I am about to have and he does feel that I have low blood volume and recommended saline IV's as did the new cardio (and the only reason we postponed was b/c my veins are bad and very hard to get the IV in.) My new cardio is an autonomic specialist and knows about low blood volume so if he feels that dysautonmia and low blood volume are the ultimate cause, I am sure he will give me suggestions on how to treat it. And like I said, I will be discussing the myocarditis issue with him in more detail.
That's why it's so important to get the diagnosis right, and that's why I think Dr. Lerner is doing exactly the right thing by assuming and treating for viral myocarditis in the presence of ME and active herpes viruses. He's a doctor who knows the heart, knows viruses, and knows ME. His "Better safe than sorry" approach makes a whole lot of sense to me, and simply sounds like good medicine.

Dr. Lerner is in Michigan (and I am in L.A.) and I already have an ME specialist. I am treating the EBV with Famvir and about to be hospitalized for extensive heart testing, so not sure what else I can do?!!! We called Dr. Lerner when I was investigating specialists and I would have to be regularly monitored by him in Michigan to see him which is not an option for me.

When you said he treats myocarditis, do you mean that he does a heart biopsy (b/c you said that is the only way to determine if it is there?) Or did you mean that he gives every EBV patient Valcyte? Or something else? My ME specialist did not feel Valcyte was needed for me as I do not have active HHV-6 or CMV (only IgG on HHV-6) and nothing on CMV. Based on my history with meds and my total history, he felt that Famvir was better for me. So, we may have to disagree on this too. I think Dr. Lerner's studies also showed that he treated many patients who only had active EBV (like me) also with Famvir, Valtrex and other anti-virals.
 
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