Hello All,
Last night at 10 PM, after a nice dinner and a movie with my dear wife, I sat at the kitchen table to check my emails and my heart went into atrial fibrillation. This is the sixth time over the course of ten years. Initially it feels like a few skip heart beats, the difference is that it does not stop. My rest heart rate is usually around 40 beats per minute. In AFIB it is 70 to 80, which in comparison to other people is a pretty low still.
My first time in AFIB was April of 1996 a week before going to Europe to qualify for the Olympics. That first time I had no idea what was happening and I thought I was going to die for sure. Luckily, I met a great electro cardiologist, specializing in arrhythmia, his same is Dr. Dicran Baron. He told me that I had two choices. One to take a medication for two days and stay at the hospital, and the other to quickly check myself in as an outpatient and get cardio-verted. He assured me that I was going to be perfectly fine right after I wake up. I can still remember this first incident as if it were yesterday.
The origins of my AFIB episodes are unknown. Whether it is training induced or not remains a question mark. In my case one is certain. Each time I went into AFIB, I was NOT exercising. The first time I was standing at the barbecue in Corona Del Mar. The second time I was pouring a glass of OJ. The third time I was picking up excrement of my dog Skiff on the beach. The fourth time I was PACKING MY SUITCASE to go to the 2000 world cup in Vienna, to qualify for the Olympics. This was the most unbelievable one, because I had to reschedule my flight for the day after, because of the cardio version at the hospital and off I went to Europe to win the Vienna Cup.
My point in blogging this is to connect with people who may feel alone with such a cardiac situation. Well they are not. I am one of you and so is my good friend Rob Waddell who won the gold at the Olympics in the men’s single scull a second in front of me.
The pictures above show me laying in my hospital bed. My wife took both pictures because I asked her to. She couldn’t believe me, but I said it was for the blog and that others needed to know. The second picture is of the cardio version device which name was HEART START XL. I guess I was finding humor in my situation.
I am perfectly healthy again and pumping at 100% on my two pistons.
All the best
Sincerely, XENO MULLER, Olympic Gold and Silver medalist.
Key words for search engines, atrial fibrillation among athletes and endurance athletes.
Xeno Muller, Olympic gold and silver medalist, indoor rowing, rowing technique.