What Is POTS??

What Is POTS??
Showing posts with label Hypovolemia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hypovolemia. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2016

TILT TABLE TEST: What is it?

A tilt table test is also sometimes called a head-up tilt test. During one, your blood pressure and heart rate will be monitored by the minute. You lie down on the table and are strapped down while it is in a flat horizontal position. The table is gradually tilted up to different levels and you are monitored for changes in BP and HR.  You will have an IV inserted during the test in case medications are needed.

The purpose of the test is to help your doctors figure out what is causing your light-headedness and/or fainting spells, sometimes called syncope.

Syncope is when you lose consciousness due to a decrease in blood flow to your brain. This can be caused by a sudden drop in blood pressure or an increase in heart rate or by a large amount of your blood volume shifting to your lower extremities. It is frequently due to some medical condition related to your nervous system, heart or the amount of blood flow to your brain.

Depending on what the results are, your doctor can then determine the best course of treatment for you and if other tests might be needed.

A couple of things can happen when you have a Tilt Table Test or when you stand up. Depending on how your sympathetic nervous system reacts, you can have either POTS or NMH,(Neurally Mediated Hypotension).

NMH is most likely to occur is you have a decrease in norepinephrine and an increase in epinephrine. POTS is the opposite, it is most likely to result from an increase in norepinephrine and a decrease in epinephrine. These hormones are sometimes referred to as catecholamines.


Don't forget to watch the POTS videos at the bottom of the blog. You have to scroll down for them.



Sunday, August 14, 2016

DIFFERENT TYPES OF POTS and SOME ASSOCIATED ILLNESSES





Neuropathic POTS ideology--POTS is an autonomic neuropathy. Nerves in the peripheral nervous system or,Small fibers that control autonomic functions and control pain are malfunctioning. About 50% of people with POTS have this type.

Hypo-adrenergic POTS--People with this type make more norepinephrine and epinephrine than normal people. NMH (ORTHOSTATIC HYPOTENSION) is most likely to occur is you have a decrease in norepinephrine and an increase in epinephrine. POTS is the opposite, it is most likely to result from an increase in norepinephrine and a decrease in epinephrine. About 33% of patients have this type.

Hypovolemic POTS--Blood Volume and urine sodium is low.About 33% have this type. Hypovolemia is Hypovolemia (also hypovolaemia or oligemia) when your body is in  a state of decreased blood volume. More precisely, you have a decrease in volume of blood plasma. It is what happens inside your blood vessels due to things like bleeding or dehydration.

Hypovolemia is related to sodium (salt) depletion which causes loss of water inside the blood vessels and is different from dehydration, which is excessive loss of body water. Symptoms of hypovolemia are tachycardia, low blood pressure, and lack of adequate blood flow which causes paleness of the skin and/or capillary refill on  the forehead, lips and nail beds. This is the time it takes  normal color to return to the skin or nail beds after pressure is applied. Other symptoms include feeling dizzy, faint, nauseated, or very thirsty. These are similar to the symptoms of shock.




Patients can have more than one type.

There is a genetic predisposition in some patients. Someone else in your family may have it. In my husband's family, his mother had it, but never got a diagnosis. And in my family, my father had it. There are major genetic things going on with my case. My father also had Parkinson's and it is genetic in our family. And in addition to this, my father had Rheumatoid Arthritis and a few secondary autoimmune conditions. I, in turn,  have,SLE (Systemic Lupus Erythematosus), Sjogren's Syndrome and other autoimmune conditions.

Typically, when you read about autonomic dysfunction, you read about a connection to Joint Hypermobility Syndrome or EDH(Ehlers-Danlos syndrome hypermobility type) . But they are autoimmune in nature, so Lupus and Rheumatoid Arthritis are not a stretch.

Parkinson's Disease is also common to read about in conjunction with autonomic dysfunction.

Other things that are connected are anemia, tumors, lightning injury(my husband was hit by lightning twice, see Page about it over on the side and read post about it here for more links), mitochondrial disease, porphyrias.


Don't forget to check out the videos at the bottom on POTS. You have to scroll down to find them.