The conflicting diagnosis is frustrating. I've not ever heard of 3rd degree being intermittent. The diagnosis of 3rd degree is a serious. The muscle in that area has to be heavily damaged and that's usually ischemia, auto immune, or a congenital issue.
Given your pacing ratio it sounds like 2nd degree is the right one.
If it were me, I would definitely bring this up with the 2nd EP to see what they say. It's fair to clear up the confusion for you. You are going to be the strongest advocate for your care, so you have to have the knowledge.
I never expected anything to reverse itself or "improve". I just didn't understand how my first EP could diagnose Complete A/V block when I have never had a left ventricular block nor any structural problems diagnosed with the left ventricle's conduction system. The only structural defect diagnosed by anyone is "downstream of the A/V node and only in the right ventricle". I think that the first EP must have diagnosed, in error, a 3rd degree, complete heart block. The second EP diagnosed 2nd degree block, Mobitz type 2. Thanks for your replies.
It sounds to me like it's structural, and probably not going to be able to reverse itself.
Thanks for your reply. Both of my EPs said that I was probably born with this condition. It is a RBBB, "downstream of the A/V node, on the right side". I've never had a left ventricular blockage.