Hey Reddit!,

I’ve always had these “weird” feeling heartbeats that would often take my breathe away. I’ve been to doctors and cardiologists and they never happen (of course) when they do tests like EKGs and doctors always say I’m perfectly fine (even did a echocardiogram).

I finally was feeling them and I think I was able to capture it on my Apple Watch.

Is this what a PVC looks like? Again feel they uncomfortable and makes me short of breath when it happens.

I will definitely be showing it to my doctor as well.

  • Cautious_Bit3513@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    What else is interesting here is that the ‘normal’ beats….the QRS complexes also appear slightly atypical. They have what looks like an ‘epsilon wave’. This is found in arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD). This is by no means diagnostic but purely an observation.

    • Confident_Ear_3002@alien.topB
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      11 months ago

      Would be cautious about identifying features such as epsilon waves on an Apple Watch tracing. Epsilon waves are usually identified in the anterior precordial leads because of delay across the RV, which is anterior. The Watch records a modified lead I tracing (one arm to the other), which is not the best lead to see those features.

      However, kudos to the OP for catching something evanescant. Between the randomness of some PVCs and the lag in recording as the Apple Watch filters and locks on the rhythm, I’m impressed! (Assuming that recording correlated with what they have been feeling.) PVCs can be weird. Some folks have thousands per hour and never feel a thing. Others have one an hour and feel every single one.

    • Intellectualuser_@alien.topOPB
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      11 months ago

      Yeah I’ve so many 12-lead EKGs and the doctors say it’s fine but slightly abnormal but it is common in young athletic men. Although they never diagnosed me with what you said