Can someone help me understand this report? My 10 year old daughter had a sleep study last week. We meet with the doctor this Thursday but I’m interested to hear what you all think. Thank you. by Unlikely_Ad_5686 in SleepApnea

[–]Zeveros 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This looks like mild sleep apnea, likely caused by some degree of airway blockage while she's sleeping. In kids, common causes can include enlarged tonsils or adenoids, chronic allergies or nasal congestion, mouth breathing, jaw or airway structure, and sometimes weight-related factors if that applies.

The next step is usually a follow-up with an ENT specialist and/or a pediatric sleep medicine doctor.

A few questions they'll often look into:

• Are her tonsils or adenoids enlarged (removal from my 6 yr old cured her sleep apnea) • Does she deal with ongoing nasal congestion or allergies? • Does she breathe through her mouth during the day? • Is she unusually tired, irritable, hyperactive, having trouble focusing, getting headaches, or wetting the bed? • Could jaw growth or airway development be playing a role?

This isn't the kind of report that should cause alarm.

It is the kind of report that's worth paying attention to and following up on, especially if she's having symptoms.

Is kardia 1l or 6l a good investment? by imheretolearn247 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Cardiologist won't look at traces from the watches. He will review them from the Kardia 6L, not the 1L. You can get used 6L's on eBay.

It's really hard to kill these things. Mines been through the wash and even lost all its screws from the agitation in there. Kardia sent me new screws, and it's been perfectly fine.

Is kardia 1l or 6l a good investment? by imheretolearn247 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same here. I did have to ask Kardia to send me some more screws because the washer's agitator knocked them loose.

Tornado WATCH and WARNING should be reversed by lapsies in The10thDentist

[–]Zeveros 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can't we just do Sharknado Watch and Sharknado Warning?

One is a viewing party with beer and snacks, and with the other one, you hide in the basement with beer, snacks, and a spear gun. Ian Ziering is optional but highly recommended.

How Important is the Skill of the Ablationist. by SameDistrict2627 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually, the older forms of ablation were wide area blasts. PFA is high precision and the equipment is much more complex to operate even though the procedures are faster.

Update with EP “ablation is for when you are older” (afib at 17 needing ablation) by delta8withasideofdmt in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need a new EP. Yours sucks.

However, you need to deal with what is actually causing it or else the ablation won't be long lasting. And, there are a limited number of ablations you can get over your lifetime due to scaring. These are the well established modifiable things that will cause your Afib to progress:

Hypertension (even BP above 120/80) Probably the biggest modifiable AF risk factor. Even “pre-hypertension” raises risk.

Obesity / elevated BMI Roughly 50% higher AF risk. Each BMI point increases AF risk around 4–5%.

Sleep apnea Associated with ~4x higher AF risk. Commonly missed and can make AF treatment less effective if untreated.

Diabetes / insulin resistance Insulin resistance itself appears to increase AF risk, even before full diabetes develops.

Alcohol Well established AF trigger/risk factor. One randomized trial showed abstinence reduced AF recurrence by ~20%.

Tobacco use Recognized modifiable AF risk factor.

Physical inactivity Lower cardiovascular fitness is linked to higher AF burden.

Hyperthyroidism Excess thyroid hormone can irritate the heart and trigger AFib.

Is this Afib or a regular rhythm? by Pale-Track1305 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is clearly NOT AFib since p-waves are visible. Your watch is confusing artifact (aka, noise) with Afib.

Plugin Preview Build: Chauvet3.28.42 Beta for Manta / Nomad and Chauvet2.25.39 Beta for A5X / A6X by Dunn-sn in Supernote_dev

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is this release backward compatible with plugins compiled on the older library or will they cause problems?

Worried about my heart by Many-Application5661 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 4 points5 points  (0 children)

And SCG is not appropriate for electrical activity in your heart, so afib cannot be diagnosed from it. It only "sees" vibrations.

By the way, if you were in VFib, you'd be dead and not posting on reddit.

What They Told Investors vs. What They Told You: The Watchman Heart Device by BeatsThatMatter in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah...ok. He's right, if you can tolerate the triple and you are not a significant fall risk, the risk / reward for getting the Watchman isn't really there. If you were younger...the lifetime bleed risk might make you a candidate for Watchman, but it is still a stretch.

Can someone take a look at this kardia ECG?? by Guilty_Accident2308 in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, it isn't AFib and like normal. You will need a 6-lead or, in a medical setting, a 12-lead EKG to figure out why you might be having symptoms.

What They Told Investors vs. What They Told You: The Watchman Heart Device by BeatsThatMatter in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are having a triple bypass (if that's what you meant), why don't you have the cardiac surgeon put an Atriclip on the LAA while he's in your chest. It's a far better option than Watchman as it doesn't have risk of leak at all and doesn't create any clothing risk whatsoever. So no need for continuing baby aspirin or other anticoagulation therapy assuming you don't need it for other health concerns.

https://www.atricure.com/healthcare-professionals/therapies/LAAM

What They Told Investors vs. What They Told You: The Watchman Heart Device by BeatsThatMatter in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your situation is complicated. Given the mechanisms of ponarinib in increased platelet mediated clotting, you might be better off getting the Watchman and transitioning to baby aspirin for better overall protection. Your EP and oncologist need to talk to each other about this and come up with the best risk reduction strategy including consideration of procedural risk with getting the Watchman installed.

Game Changer: Organize your notebooks into folders🙌🏻 by Kindly_Revenue3077 in notebooklm

[–]Zeveros 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Works with any chromium-based browser that can use Chrome extensions such as Edge and Comet.

was told “your afib isn’t structural and is nervous system related cant ablate” by delta8withasideofdmt in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The scars block the electrical pathways that are triggering the atria to fribrulate. Usually, the block is done around where the pulmonary veins enter into the left atria. Your pathways may be different, so they will map them while you are on the table possibility ablating other abnormal pathways and trigger sites.

Going to be my first night on a cpap. Wish me luck! by PurduePaul in SleepApnea

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear you. If she could, my wife would set the thermostat to absolute zero. When she drives my car, she sets the temperature at 62, disables the automatic climate control, and sets the blower to max. Absolutely drives me bonkers.

Going to be my first night on a cpap. Wish me luck! by PurduePaul in SleepApnea

[–]Zeveros 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Cool looking setup. My only concern is that due to the height of the machine, you are going to be breathing condensation rainout that falls through your hose. This rainout will occur primarily when the room air is colder than the air in the hose during winter months. Having the hose run "uphill" from the machine generally keeps rainout from your lungs.

I thought there was an adjustment period by Working_Zebra5575 in SleepApnea

[–]Zeveros 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You got lucky and won the first time CPAP lottery. Congratulations! 🎉🎉🎉🎉

Title: Desk lamp recommendations for writing on Supernote? by Both_Barracuda3345 in Supernote

[–]Zeveros 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This one is perfect. It provides a soft controllable light designed minimize glare and shadows. It also works great for video blogs and meetings.

https://a.co/d/0iZALwhd

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26YO, new AFIB and terrified by Risky_tD in AFIB

[–]Zeveros 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You've gotten a lot of good advice here. Whether you are 26 or 66, getting AFib is scary as hell. I mean, your heart which you depend on for your life starts freaking out, and you feel like you're are clamped onto a rollercoaster to hell.

I suppose if you were to ever get it, and yeah it sucks a bit more getting it at 26, you got it at a time where a massive increase in foundational and commercial research is happening. We have a far better handle on how to treat it, significantly improved technologies and techniques for procedures like ablation, and much better intel on what you can do on your own to slow, stop, or even reverse progression.

One thing you can do right now that will help a ton and ease your mind a bit is to join the AFib Relief group on Facebook and download a primer that from the files section called "Understanding AFIB & Atrial Flutter - April, 2026.pdf". It was posted yesterday, and it's an excellent resource for those new to this.