physician wrote:
There is a lot of misinformation on these boards which is presented in a very confident, matter of fact manner. Please do not post medical advice if you are not an MD. Even then, it's not a very good idea.
I am an academic physician actively engaged in research concerning sports cardiology.
A couple of quick points and corrections (not advice):
1. Sudden cardiac arrest means only that the heart "stopped" and is the cause of death. It CAN be a heart attack, despite what some have stated on this board. It can be any of a host of arrhythmias: Ventricular tachycardia (including torsades de pointe), ventricular fibrillation, but very very rarely SVT (including wolf parkinson white usually with atrial fibrillation, AVNRT, and others). These arrhythmias can be due to a heart attack (either from traditional blockages of the arteries or birth defects with the arteries that feed the heart). They can be due to genetic cardiomyopathies (ARVC, HOCM, non-ischemic cardiomyopathy), acquired cardiomyopathies, myocarditis, and many others.
2. AED's and high-quality chest compressions are likely the ONLY things that will save someone's life. Period. Are there some arrhythmias that do not respond to AED's? Yes. However, it would be virtually criminal to avoid using an AED because you read that on Letsrun. Please keep in mind, 99.9999% of people on this message board have literally no idea what they're saying. It just sounds good to them and makes them feel better about themselves.
3. The difference between the "athlete heart" and problematic conditions such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is not something understood by the general practitioner or even the general cardiologist. You will need a sports cardiologist to tease out the difference. Even then, you may actually have to de-train to see the difference. The diagnosis of ARVC is even more difficult sometimes requiring special electrophysiology studies and even genetic studies to truly answer the question.
4. Listening to advice about electrolytes (and the replacement thereof), drug-induced changes to the QT interval, someone's odd need to describe the R on T phenomenon to non-physicians (who have no idea what an R or a T is) is NOT a good idea. If you have concerns over your health, consult a physician and have a low threshold to seek the expertise of a sports cardiologist.
What in my post did you correct? You essentially restated what I already said. Where did I say that you should not use an AED? Where did I say that you should not consult a physician over cardiac related concerns? I did the exact opposite.
Oh and by the way, SCA is not a heart attack. The Heart Rhythm Society clearly differentiates between SCA and a heart attack.
Is it really strange to mention something such as an R on T phenomenon...something quite simple to understand within 30seconds of using google, on a thread regarding a sudden cardiac arrest?
You sound like a premed student with an axe to grind.