Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Hyperadrenergic POTS?

I am just wondering if anyone has Hyperadrenergic POTS?  I've chatted with a few people on a different forum, but no one has this form, and I have a lot of questions.  I am supposed to have a complete hysterectomy soon, and I am wondering if anyone has this type of POTS and has gone through menopause, and wouldn't mind sharing with me what it was like.  I am in medical menopause now (I'm 28, so this happened unexpectedly), but I was told today that it's not quite the same, and I am really nervous.  I've suffered from POTS symptoms since I was 12, but just got the diagnosis last March, so everything is still relatively new to me.  Also, I haven't been able to find a medication that helps, and I seem to experience every side effect there is, so I am wondering what people have tried that has worked.  Thanks.
36 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
I forgot to mention, I've taken Ativan (lorazepam) before.  It does help quite a bit.  I've found that if I'm having a day where I am super sensitive to everything and keep jumping and twitching a lot, I can take some of that and have everything calm down, yet still be able to think straight and function.  It's been hard for me to get prescriptions, because of the fact that it's addicting, but I am going to ask my cardiologist if he will write a new script, as I have yet to find anything else that helps so well.  I figure the damage of the adrenaline bursts is worse than the possiblity of forming an addiction.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Ooh, I am definitely trying the parsley bit.  I prefer to go as natural/herbal as possible with how hyper-sensitive I am to chemicals, so that sounds fantastic.  My husband started selling herbal/natural diet products, so I always carry the powder electrolyte drink mix from that.
My new job is quite stressful, but I seem to be doing alright so far.  It is mentally stressful, but physically not, and most of it I enjoy.  I have a feeling the attorneys may have plans to put too much on my plate (they want me to learn the case management side and the litigation side, while you typically only do one or the othe), and while I appreciate their confidence in my mental abilities, I think it may prove to be a bit much.  We will see how everything works out, but if it's horrible on the stress side, I might see if I could switch to part time later.  My son goes to an at-home daycare, that is run by lifelong friends of my husband, Josh.  Josh just got a new job as well, tarping trucks, on a rotating shift.  Not sure how well that will work either, but it means that some weeks Caleb (my son) is in daycare all day, and sometimes he is only there a few hours, but on those days Josh and I don't see each other, which is so very, very hard.  We also have a lot of family in the area, and have parents/grandparents/siblings who will watch Caleb for a day on occassion, which gives him more one on one time, and really makes everyone happy.  When my dad and stepmom watch him I go over there for lunch, and get to play for awhile, which I love.
I love to hear you say how much you are still in love.  My husband is all the things I am not, as well, and I love him dearly for it.  Our first date I had an episode, and he just got down on the floor and kept talking to me like nothing had changed, and kept making me laugh.  Before we learned I had POTS, last March, we had spend several months honestly thinking that I was going to die within a short time, because I had been on medication that made my BP dangerously high, had my heart going crazy and my chest hurting most of the day, had suffered a bad miscarriage, had been forced to leave school, and could barely do anything but lay on the couch without passing out.  Even through all of that, Josh was incredibly supportive, and his love was very obvious, just looking at him and seeing how many little things he did throughout the day to try to make things better, and try to make me smile.
It does seem like we figure some things out and others pop up - like figuring out what was wrong with my heart, only to be diagnosed with IC and endometriosis, but I've learned that this battle can only be taken one day at a time.  I could wake up tomorrow, feel great, go to work, have a ton of energy, and never think twice about whether I might pass out or need to be careful standing up.  Or I might wake up like I did this morning, with my BP 85/75 and my HR in the 130s before I've even done anything.  I just never know.  If I focus on the fact that tomorrow might be bad, then I can't enjoy today, and if today is the day that is bad, well, then, I hold my hope in tomorrow and try to find something small that is good about today, that at least makes it a little more okay.  One of my favorite songs has the line, "you've got to face the clouds to find the silver lining", and days like today that's true.  Today I've mostly spent on the couch, and though I could have that fact make me feel miserable, instead it reminds me of what things were like a year ago, how much has changed since then, and how many things I still have to look forward to.  I'm still frustrated that my kitchen is a disaster because I couldn't stand to clean it, but there's a balance.  I might just need to go buy paper plates.  :)
I do have long entries on here.  I hope no one minds, I just process information best while writing, and there are days where a lot is going on in my mind.  I am so grateful to be able to talk about this stuff, and not feel like a freak on display, or a guinea pig.
<> back to you, again.  I hope your foot is doing much better.  :)
Helpful - 0
1272082 tn?1343103540
Hi Heidi,

THANK YOU!!!! I'm all teared up now.  Thanks for the encouragement and for helping me not feel soooooo alone in this.  I've read some of your other post in different places and saw you had a bike accident.  So you do know what I'm going through.  I'm not athlectic at all and I'm overweight and breaking my foot off is not going to be at all easy on me.  I'll get stronger, and hopefully lose some weight -- but wish it wasn't for this reason.  It seems like at times you get some things figured out and something else puts a monkey wrench in it.  My wonderful husband has been great.  He is all the things I'm not.  I'm really relying on his strength.  Both physically and emotionally.  I'm very fortunate.  Been married 30 years and still in LOVE!!!!!
I'm finding the Ultram to be pretty effective.  I'm taking an Advil every once in awhile.  I too have migraines and the Advil helps that.  I have Ehlers Danlos and it causes muscle spasams and pain and have Fibromyligia.  They had given me Ultram for those things but I was only taking one a day.  They said I could take 3 a day and so I'm doing that with my foot/leg.  It has some antidepressant effects.  And I really need that right now.  Last night I took l/2 of the demeorol and l/2 of a phenegan and slept like a baby.  Haviing some problems with the POTS this morning, but feel it was worth it to be out of the pain and sleep well last night.  When the delaudtin messed me up in the hospital, they gave me Adavain --an antianxiety med.  Boy did that help.  I think it helped the POTS too.  Anyone had any experience with that?  Thought I'd ask my Dr. --when I get one-- about maybe having some on hand for emergencies.
Heidi, I thought of something else, I don't think I've told you.  Because of the adrenal dysfunction that we have; they give me cortisol during and before surgery.  It helps support the adrenals due to the stress that you're under.  They have used that on me with my last few surgeries and it has made a HUGE difference.  You don't go so hyper to everything.  Ask your Doc about it.  After my hysterectomy, they had me take a small amount of it via pills after surgery.  
I swear, I had all the bladder issues that allot of you are going through before my hysterectomy.  Don't have much problems now.  Sometimes I get the urgency and the feel of the start of an infection.  But, I found the miracle cure --------fresh PARSLEY!
I used all the meds had uretha stretchs did everything the docs said.  Nothing worked.  Get fresh parsley, put it in water and boiled it, until the water gets real green.  Drink it everytime you think of it.  It numbs the pain and heals up the bladder.  If I can't get to fresh parsley, like I'm on the road -- I carry Parsley caps with me.  It doesn't help as well but it is better than none.  It is high in potassium and I think helps balance out your electrolytes when we get out of balance.  I also use Emergen C for that.  It's easy to keep in your purse and less calories than Gaterade without the corn syrup.  Hope this helps others as much as it's helped me.
Heidi, I was in the legal field too.  I found it to be very stressful.  Hope you handle it better than I did.  It's a real competive field.  Remember, stress makes us worse.  I'll be rooting for you.  Do you have a sitter for your son?  Or, can you do it from home?
Thanks for the Hug.  I love them, even if they are only virual ones.  Here's one back to you!!!
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
I am soooo sorry about your foot!  And about not making it out of town - and the nurses, and the pain meds, and the problems getting up - oh my goodness I feel like I am reading my story and just want to cry for you!  I reached behind me in the car last week to hand my son a sip cup, and managed to dislocate a rib, tear my rotator cuff in my shoulder, and strain my shoulder and neck to where they are having severe spasms.  Went to the doctor and explained what happened, about POTS and the chemical sensitivity, especially to pain meds, and he ended up not giving me anything for pain (though he did prescribe muscle relaxers, which I am grateful for and haven't had a problem with) and I overheard him outside the room saying that diagnosing patients with POTS was a new fad, and for the other doctor not to take it too seriously.  Made me mad, but they aren't my regular doctors anyway, so I've learned to just let stupid comments like that go.  There are other options for pain meds, I don't understand why my doctor and your nurse both decided we were just better of in intense pain.  The last nurse I tried to explain the medications I've had reactions to just looked at me like I had declared I moved here from Mars.
I've had problems with my legs on occassion, too, and have needed my husband's help.  Be patient with yourself, and ignore the stupid, ignorant people who don't understand what you are going through.  There are a lot of people rooting for you, who know exactly what it feels like to have to reteach our bodies something that should be simple.  It should be simple to stand up, but sometimes its just not, and even though it stinks, we have to hold on to the fact that this, too, will pass, and if we are in a bad period now, that means a good period is coming.  You have made it through a lot, and you will make it through this.  It doesn't mean it won't be hard, but it does mean there's a light at the end of the tunnel, with a lot of people cheering you on to keep pressing on.  And if you're feeling down and frustrated, and need a good rant or someone to cry along with you, we're here for that too.  Good or bad, we are all living through this together.  One statement I used to tease myself with when I was having trouble even with a cane was, "One small step for mankind, one giant leap for a person with POTS".  I don't know if anyone else will find it funny, but it used to always make me chuckle, and kind of keep things in perspective.  I wish I could give you a hug.  How about a virtual one?  <>  Hang in there.  
Helpful - 0
1272082 tn?1343103540
Hi Heidi,

Well, you sure got allot of responses since I left a week ago.  Interesting to find that so many people have had bladder issues.  I had those so bad before my hysterectomy.  I seldom have issues now.  Except for the fact that as you age, you lose the muscle tone and its a little harder to hold and not leak.  As far as the hormones.  They can be compounded by a pharmacy in their natural form and used on the skin.  It bypasses the liver that way and there are a lot less problems.  There are 3 kinds of estrogen.  One kind - estriol - actually prevents cancer.  It may be enough and not need the other two.  It will help prevent vaginal atropy, helps you keep your libedo and keeps you from getting wrinkled.  I too have osteopenia, but I'm 14 years out from my hysterectomay and 50 years old.  I don't think that's too bad - considering.
I didn't make it out of town, by the way.  I had a terrible fall and broke my foot off my leg.  Yup, all the bones and ligaments, tendons -foot.  It has been terrible.  I had so much trouble with the medicines.  We were a few hours out of town and I fell.  Had to go to two hospitals before I had surgery.  Explaining the POTS thing and them all feeling like you're just nuts.  Can't take this medicine, can't take that medicine.  One nurse wanted me to lay there and not have anything because I couldn't take what she wanted me to take.  I was furious.  My husband said he'd just give me some left overs from before if they didn't get it right.  They finally got it right.  But after about one and a half weeks I started reacting to that med.  Now I'm just using Ultram 3 times a day.  Seem to be doing pretty well on that.  The delotin and dememoral gave me severe anxiety and started to not help the pain.  It's so frustrating, NO ONE but us that have this understands.  There are so few doctors that have even heard of it.  I'm dreading the rehab part of it.  The lady that came in to teach me how to get up with the walker and to get into the wheel chair, couldn't understand why I was having such problems.  Well,  I had problems before I broke my foot off my leg.  I'm consider completely disabled and have had to use a cane at times because my legs won't work.  Some times my husband has to pull me up out of a chair because I can't get up.  How am I going to manage learning to walk again with all the other issues?  Anyone got some encouragement?
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
I know the feeling of having too much going on in one body, as you said.  POTS, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Fibromyalgia, Migraines, IBS, GERD, Perimenopause, and I'm sure I've left something out.... Due to health issues, I ended up adopting two wonderful daughters from China.  I knew my body couldn't make it through pregnancy and was also worried about their chances of having POTS, CFS/FMS, etc.

Keep us posted. Hang in there.  
Helpful - 0
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Autonomic Dysfunction Community

Top Arrhythmias Answerers
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Are there grounds to recommend coffee consumption? Recent studies perk interest.
Salt in food can hurt your heart.
Get answers to your top questions about this common — but scary — symptom
How to know when chest pain may be a sign of something else
A list of national and international resources and hotlines to help connect you to needed health and medical services.
Herpes sores blister, then burst, scab and heal.