AFib Treatment at Home: Take Control of Your Health

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2024
  • In this video, we'll be discussing afib treatment at home. By following the steps in this video, you'll be able to take control of your health and reclaim your life.
    Having afib is a serious heart condition, and it can be difficult to manage. In this video, we'll be discussing afib treatment at home, and providing you with the information you need to take control of your health.
    The top natural treatment for atrial fibrillation. Everything you need for natural treatment on atrial fibrillation is available in one place with the Take Control Over AFib Program:
    reverse-afib.com/yt-take-cont...
    Start today to reverse AFib naturally in a way medicines and procedures cannot. Get 15% off with coupon code DOCTORAFIB at the checkout page. reverse-afib.com/yt-take-cont...
    The Complete Guide to AFib is the easy to understand, complete book on atrial fibrillation, written by AFib expert, Dr. Percy Morales.
    Get your copy on Amazon here: reverse-afib.com/complete-gui...
    Check out my website for all my content: drafib.com
    Check out my Affiliate Links:
    Get your own KardiaMobile device - my top recommended product for at home monitoring of atrial fibrillation. Get yours here: shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=877806...
    Information is strictly educational in nature
    #afib #afibtreatment #afibsymptoms #atrialfibrillation

Комментарии • 49

  • @mccullenannmcdade
    @mccullenannmcdade 6 месяцев назад +16

    I have had afib since i was a teenager. Then they said it was anxiety. I learned i had paradoxical afib in my late 60s, I am now 76. I only have it maybe 2 or 3 times a year now. It mostly starts a night when i am just going to sleep, I have always controlled it by getting up and jumping around. This will stop it. I do not take medication.

    • @ViralVideos-nk4hi
      @ViralVideos-nk4hi Месяц назад +1

      Suprising

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 12 дней назад

      Unusual. Perhaps you mean "paroxysmal" a. fib. You might consider talking with your cardiologist about having a home sleep apnea study. That consists of wearing a small battery-powered recorder while you sleep. You return it the next day to have it read.

  • @Pollydoidle
    @Pollydoidle 8 месяцев назад +11

    Definitely a connection between stomach acid and an afib episode

    • @lillinamaria
      @lillinamaria 8 месяцев назад +7

      I believe so too but both my cardio and my gastro deny any correlation. I sometimes seem to think that all they are interested in is tablets, tablets and more tablets, or directly some kind of procedure.

    • @hasanmorris5853
      @hasanmorris5853 Месяц назад

      @@lillinamaria Those doctors are stupid. I went to homeopathic doctor that took care of my stomach acid and it improved my afib a lot.

    • @Loonypapa
      @Loonypapa Месяц назад +2

      It's undeniable in my case.

  • @jonkernow5529
    @jonkernow5529 8 месяцев назад +24

    I had continuous AFib and had 2 cardio versions which only put me back in sinus rhythm for two days. I then had an ablation which worked fro 5 months and then slowly returned to continuous A Fib again. I had stopped caffein from coffee and tea but this did not seem to be the answer. Although not a big drinker of alcohol I decided to stop all alcohol and after 6 months I noticed gaps in A Fib and then after 9 months it stopped. It was noticed at tests that my heart rate was dropping to 42 bpm with a normal heart rate of 50bpm so they advised a pacemaker which I had fitted in feb 2023. The operation triggered A Fib again so I was due to have a cardio version in August but in August my heart returned to sinus rhythm without any help and has been good so far.

    • @finnster5800
      @finnster5800 7 месяцев назад +4

      Mine is happening every other day… I just started beta blockers, taking more magnesium, need more sleep - in menopause so sleep hasn’t been good

    • @Loonypapa
      @Loonypapa Месяц назад

      How have you been doing?

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 12 дней назад

      That's actually not an unusual history. Often recurrences of a. fib. can be eliminated by "atrial overdrive suppression" using the atrial pacing channel of your unit. Slow heart rate due to sinus node dysfunction is common and a. fib. can then occur as an escape dysrhythmia. Suppression with atrial pacing can be very effective. Stopping alcohol was very smart.

  • @siuyinng8374
    @siuyinng8374 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you very much for advice.❤

  • @bruceprigge5212
    @bruceprigge5212 8 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you! 😊

  • @alisalehi2077
    @alisalehi2077 4 месяца назад +1

    thank you.

  • @vilmastansell9338
    @vilmastansell9338 2 месяца назад

    Stress causes afib aswell iam 84 yes and had a lot of stress I realise what was brining it on so I worked on my stress level and I don't go to a& e anymore thanks to the most high for guiding me

  • @mariadyment6311
    @mariadyment6311 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank God for you!!!!

  • @rockstarmax
    @rockstarmax 5 месяцев назад +2

    Great Video and after watching the whole video I used your Carotid artery technique and my numbers went from 157 to 98 in 30 min. Thank you so much. Max in Florida

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 12 дней назад

      Ask your own physician if that is a safe thing for you to do. If you have arteriosclerotic plaques in your carotid arteries, that could be dangerous.

  • @XXXBUTLER
    @XXXBUTLER 4 месяца назад +2

    Dr…. GREAT NEWS ! I just saw a video you did from a year ago (comments turned off) Several years ago I had an Afib attach , went to hospital with a heart rate around 180 after eating dinner out. It converted on its own right as they were about to force it to convert. I was put on a BP medication that has a side effect of helping afib. A while back I was having ongoing stomach issues bad. Dr put me on prescription prilasic so insurance would cover it. 40mg every morning. Sometime later I discovered that there are different types of magnesium and I was taking high dose of wrong type that was keeping my stomach sick often so I changed my magnesium type to the correct one and my stomach seems much better over the last year. Now I have new onset of neuropathy with bad muscle cramps, horrible ones. So add Gabbapetine. And now my Afib is giving me trouble again. Trying to adjust dosage and how often as of a week or so ago. So I JUST NOW saw your old video and you stated that proton pump inhibitors deplete magnesium and that magnesium was really good for treating Afib. I thought to myself that sounds to much like Prilosec so I looked it up and sure enough… as of tomorrow I’m not taking the Prilosec because my stomach seems much better after changing to correct type of magnesium and now my Afib attacks will diminish because I’ll be getting non depleted correct type of magnesium and along with my electrolytes my neuropathy should subside giving me some relief. I should be my young self again in no time. Thank you for one of my missing puzzle pieces that holds everything together. Relinquishing Prilosec.

    • @veelly
      @veelly 3 месяца назад +3

      What was the right type of magnesium that you used?

  • @mikerose1266
    @mikerose1266 4 месяца назад

    Hi doctor, I'm finding your videos very informative. Have you seen a patient who was going back forth from A-fib to A-flutter? Is a a term for that? What are treatment options?

  • @donnamichel992
    @donnamichel992 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hi Dr, do you know about the wolf mini maze procedure Done by Dr wolf in Houston? Please tell me your opinion.

  • @goddessandcuchi
    @goddessandcuchi 6 месяцев назад

    Needs tips for shortness of breath from afib and leaky tricuspid....

  • @joesanchez3646
    @joesanchez3646 6 месяцев назад +1

    Every time I stand and start walking my A fib begins, sometime it will stop on its own and sometimes when I take deep breaths it will stop but heart rate drops below 50 BPM.

  • @Pollydoidle
    @Pollydoidle 8 месяцев назад +6

    Aspartame and carbonated drinks trigger mine

    • @henryw5762
      @henryw5762 8 месяцев назад

      Is the drink carbonated or non-carbonated? Ty

  • @roberttitus313
    @roberttitus313 8 месяцев назад +2

    I'm in afib 24/7. Any advice? They are scheduling for a Watchman's device. My situation complicated by cirrhosis. Any advice? I exercise and follow a good diet. Lots of fruits and veggies. I'm 77.

  • @jrcr4004
    @jrcr4004 8 месяцев назад

    Type III LAD.. can you suggest how yobreverse

  • @guzzi95
    @guzzi95 8 месяцев назад +8

    What about CoQ10 for Afib?

  • @RobDaman
    @RobDaman 3 месяца назад

    My triggers so far are sleeping on left side and stomach aches (had gallbladder removed). Valsava maneuver works to drop my heart rate from 150 to under 100. It still stays in AFib for some time. Cold /ice to back of my neck seems to help AFib but can return soon.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 12 дней назад

      It's amazing how often people say that lying on one side or another (usually the left) provokes atrial arrhythmias. Most of these need to take antiarrhythmic medications of one sort or another. But sleep apnea related occurrences should be eliminated with a home study device and prolonged rhythm recording with a wearable device should be done. Talk with your cardiologist.

  • @RazminWorld
    @RazminWorld 8 месяцев назад

    Dr ..two months before i had heart beat of 300 and i was admitted and given electric shock..now its controlled under 3type of medication ..is this medication for my life long?coz its make me dizzy😢

  • @ferdinandbellavance5045
    @ferdinandbellavance5045 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you doctors for the information ,i am 75 years old ,had afid for 3 years non stop ,i had a cardioversion one year ago, didn't work, will ablation help me at my age,Ferdinand

  • @williamjolly5539
    @williamjolly5539 8 месяцев назад +2

    I have a question about ablation. If you have that procedure done and changing your lifestyle as well, is there still a chance to reverse afib with a lifestyle change? Does it improve the odds of getting afib out of my life?

    • @BarrrAmundi
      @BarrrAmundi 8 месяцев назад +1

      That’s the goal

  • @annv6133
    @annv6133 3 месяца назад

    Doc my father got Afib after taking vit d 60k .is there any relation.His vit d level is 9

  • @BarrrAmundi
    @BarrrAmundi 8 месяцев назад +6

    I just signed up to your programme and have started with the meal plan and foods you have said to eat.
    I had mild atrial fibrillation which was manageable before I got COVID in July 2022.
    After COVID I could not manage it with the medication I had been prescribed and went in for an ablation in July 2023.
    I’m still not able to control the atrial fibrillation and now SVT with meds and after the ablation.
    I just went back into hospital two months after ablation as heart was beating uncontrollably at 190-205bpm
    They wanted to go in to do another ablation but it only been 8 weeks since first ablation.
    I was able to settle it down with 120mg X 2 sotalol a day in hospital.
    The food in hospital was so poor.
    I was so hungry when I left I grabbed the first thing available at the Petrol station. kfc chicken burger.
    My heart started pounding again.
    I’m dedicated to follow your programme as I believe in what it has outlined.
    I’m also going to try Theropy (cognitive behavioural therapy) and ( emotional disregarding therapy ) to try and get this under control.
    I’m not overweight or unhealthy.
    But have been rendered pretty useless physically for over a year now.
    I believe in what you are saying.
    I’ll let you know how it all goes.
    I don’t drink alcohol, coffee or smoke.
    I’m focusing on meal sizes and food types now.

  • @TheNutbrittle
    @TheNutbrittle 3 месяца назад

    I got my AFIB as a complication from an open heart surgery (Aortic aneurysm) . There's a bit of fluid around the heart chambers that make it beat faster. I'm currently on meds. My question is, are these techniques applicable to my condition? Will it help slow down the heart beats? I've no history of AFIB prior to the surgery. I was also physically active, and eat whole foods [ketovore] I'm hoping to get my normal heart rhythm back asap. I'm 2 weeks into recovery.

    • @wholeNwon
      @wholeNwon 12 дней назад

      2 wks. post op? Where was the aneurysm? Were you told what type it was? Did it dissect?

  • @jennifereldridge273
    @jennifereldridge273 7 месяцев назад +3

    I’m waiting 9 months to get to see a heart dr
    I’m terrified 😢

    • @aureliomartinez2633
      @aureliomartinez2633 Месяц назад +1

      I saw a cardiologist yesterday only wait 6 weeks he changed my prescription but today I have been having AFib for hours right now I'm back to normal just about to sleep

    • @skyway7582
      @skyway7582 19 дней назад

      Sounds like you are in Alaska.I’ve been waiting 3 months….

    • @JBrye-xd8bw
      @JBrye-xd8bw 7 дней назад

      🙏🏽 ❤