
Atrial Fibrillation, Missed Heart Beat, Digestive Disorders, Vagus Nerve Impacted. Treatment ?

As you know AF is relatively common but individuals are affected to varying degrees. It looks like you have what we call paroxysmal AF which means it comes and goes with minimal predictability.
It is not clear why the episodes are becoming more frequent lately in your case. Some think that the heart muscle gets more irritable with time which lowers the threshhold of flipping into AF. Usually we try to control te rhythm with medicines such as flecainide or the rate with medicines such as metoprolol. It may be necessary at this point for you to sit down with your cardiologist to see if a medication adjustment is in order.
Now regarding digestive disorders and AF not a lot has been published on a large scale with studies involving hundreds of patients BUT I can say from my experience that patients with AF seem to report more bowel irregularity than average. Could this be due to the alteration in pulsating blood flow to the gut? We do not know for sure.
I wonder if when you have the AF that you become anxious. Anxiety can increase blood flow to the kidneys and could trigger a more rapid urine production and hence urge to urinate. The anxiety could also affect the muscle of the bladder which could give you the same urge.
Breathlessness is very very common in AF. The reason is that the heart must work more diligently to pump blood efficiently. In AF the heart does not relax fully between beats and can't fill with an adequate amount of blood to equal normal heart function. For this reason it has to work harder to deliver the same amount of blood to the tissues.
I thank you again for your query and hope my answer has been both helpful and informative. Should you have additional concerns I would be happy to address them.
Sincerely,
Dr. Galamaga.

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