This blog started out as a place for me to share my progress towards the completion of the 2 Oceans Half Marathon in 2009. That day has come and gone and I have reached my goal. This will now be a place for me to share whatever my current big goal is.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Exhaustion test 2
End of week two asks for another exhaustion test, this morning I could do 22 push ups non stop. This puts me in the middle column for week 3 again. I'll give it a try tomorrow. What's a little disappointing is that two weeks ago I could do 15 in the first exhaustion test and now I can only do 22, and in 4 weeks time I'm supposed to be able to do 100?! Ja right! But I'll still persevere, perhaps it takes me another 11 weeks!
Friday, June 11, 2010
Week 2 day 3
That was torture!! I'm not really sure it's valid and I'll think about whether to continue with week 3 next week or to redo week 2. It certainly seems like it's necessary, I could barely manage the final 15 set, but I did the required 60... JUST.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Week 2 day 2
It doesn't get any easier! Last night was really tough again, I still wonder if going to the gym beforehand is affecting how many I can do. I did 53 last night and once again could only do the prescribed 13 pushups for the final set. Tomorrow requires that I do 60 in total!! OMG what have I started!!
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Week 2 day 1
Wow! Today was MUCH more difficult, I don't really know why because I didn't even do that many more than Friday! I could only do the required 11 at the end... this is tough! In total today I did 47 push ups.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Week 1 day 3
I almost skipped this one. Dancing last night included a dip which I just couldn't get right! So I through the lady dipped and lifted the lady many times much to the dismay of the muscles in my back, which started complaining a few hours later. Now they are screaming at me..
I did 47, I would have settled for 42 which is all the program calls for but a good friend of mine would have made fun of me, so my last set was 15 as opposed to 10 :P
Thursday, June 3, 2010
An imaginative name for a post
After gym, I did 39 today... still the middle column, day 2 of week 1 on the program. Managed to do 13 as my last set. I think Friday is gonna be a killer!
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
hundred pushups
I forgot to add the link to the program if you want to join me :P http://hundredpushups.com/
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Come to think of it
I was at the cardiologist in Feb and the news was fantastic, I just forgot completely to post about it. My EF is something crazy like 45% and the size of my heart is within normal limits. I still have the odd bought of arrythmia, but on the whole it seems the ticker ticks pretty regularly. Still need to watch myself, but I think I'm well out of the woods, as long as I'm sensible, keep exercising and eat relatively healthy.
Here we go again
Wow, it's been 10 months give or take since I last blogged!! Unfortunately the last mission was a bit of a flop, I haven't yet finished my MSc, but I really really think it's close now!
Thanks to Jon, I stole his idea for this mission...if he ever reads it, he'll know which Jon he is. I'm going to the gym regularly, but sometimes find it a bit monotonous. So when I saw this challenge I had to do it! Started last night with the initial test and did 15 pushups. I could probably have done more, but because I wanted to gym today AND do the program I left it there, I'll get into the proper category after week 2 of the program.
Today I did the middle column even though 15 gets me into the right hand column, but whatever this felt ok. I'll get to 100 in 7 or 8 weeks I guess... or maybe 6! Whats cool about this site is that it doesn't stop at pushups. Theres a program for sit ups, squats and theres a program for pull ups coming! I'll see how far I get, but perhaps I'll do them all.
For now 100 push ups here I come.
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
More good news
I thought I'd take some liberties with my work time and write a quick post. I went to the cardiologist again today for a follow up appointment after my abortive cardioversion two months back and a month of amiodarone.
It was more of the same with an ECG and echo, I didn't even see the ECG but I assume it was fine, the echo concluded that my heart was of a normal size and my Ejection Fraction was 50% which is fantastic! So now it seems that my only real problem is my heart rythm which misbehaves from time to time, and still doesn't allow me to have full capacity while exerting myself.
I was however able to get hold of the report for the cardioablation that my previous cardiologist performed in 2004. Dr Guerra is going to contact an electrophysiologist and we will consider another ablation as the technology has improved greatly in the passed few years, but only if the other doctor thinks its worth the effort.
So perhaps there is some more hospital time in my near future, but if it is successful then I will feel a lot better ALL the time!
As for my MSc, it's pogressing slowly, but progressing, I had to take a bit of a break to catch up on the reading that I should have done, thats pretty much done now and I should be able to continue writing, and hopefully be finished by the end of the year latest.
All said the news is encouraging, I'm not going to say I'll write more often again, cause I probably won't but I'll try :)
Friday, June 5, 2009
Somewhat wasted day
I got to Dr Guerra's rooms at 7:20 this morning, the expected traffic did not materialise. It was a day of waiting. Good thing I took my book, and a new one just incase I finished that one! Had an early ECG that showed I was in arrythmia, so we went ahead and I was admitted for the day. This time instead of spending hours waiting in the reception while they found me a bed I was sent straight up to the ward... it looked like this might be a quick one.
I got my own room which was and wasn't cool, atleast when there are nurses rushing around you feel like you can't be forgotten. Every now and then someone would traipse in and do and ECG or take blood or put a drip in. But mostly I lay back and read my book, napped, read some more. Finished my book, started the new one. I watched 10 o'clock go by then 11, then 12 at 1pm I got up and went to find out what was going on.
Apparently i was in a general ward and for the procedure I needed to be in the high care ward, but there weren't any beds there currently so I waited and waited while they juggled patients around to find me a bed. Finally at about 2:30 I walked into the high care ward, much to the disgust of the other patients who were variously wired up or being beaten by physio's. I was soon to be wired up myself, but mercifully there was no physio to beat me... or perhaps...
Anyway as I lay there on the monitors one of the sisters came and asked what the problem was, I dutifully answered the usual questions, and then she said, "But you're in sinus rhythm", which was kindof what I though from my appointment on Wednesday morning. Anyway they were most puzzled and said you couldn't cardiovert someone in sinus rhythm blah blah blah. Eventually the doctor came and was a little puzzled himself, but a few minutes he returned and concurred that he thought I was in sinus and could go home. At first I thought he was joking, but apparently not!
Seems the amiodarone has done the trick for now, and I should keep taking 1 of these nasty tablets for the next month! But the proof of the pudding is in the eating and I will only know for certain whether his call is right once I go for a test drive so to speak. I'm gonna give the drug some more time to do it's work and only go for a walk on Monday, then I should know the true verdict.
I got my own room which was and wasn't cool, atleast when there are nurses rushing around you feel like you can't be forgotten. Every now and then someone would traipse in and do and ECG or take blood or put a drip in. But mostly I lay back and read my book, napped, read some more. Finished my book, started the new one. I watched 10 o'clock go by then 11, then 12 at 1pm I got up and went to find out what was going on.
Apparently i was in a general ward and for the procedure I needed to be in the high care ward, but there weren't any beds there currently so I waited and waited while they juggled patients around to find me a bed. Finally at about 2:30 I walked into the high care ward, much to the disgust of the other patients who were variously wired up or being beaten by physio's. I was soon to be wired up myself, but mercifully there was no physio to beat me... or perhaps...
Anyway as I lay there on the monitors one of the sisters came and asked what the problem was, I dutifully answered the usual questions, and then she said, "But you're in sinus rhythm", which was kindof what I though from my appointment on Wednesday morning. Anyway they were most puzzled and said you couldn't cardiovert someone in sinus rhythm blah blah blah. Eventually the doctor came and was a little puzzled himself, but a few minutes he returned and concurred that he thought I was in sinus and could go home. At first I thought he was joking, but apparently not!
Seems the amiodarone has done the trick for now, and I should keep taking 1 of these nasty tablets for the next month! But the proof of the pudding is in the eating and I will only know for certain whether his call is right once I go for a test drive so to speak. I'm gonna give the drug some more time to do it's work and only go for a walk on Monday, then I should know the true verdict.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Another visit to the doc
The past few weeks haven't seen me improve much, infact nothing has changed, I can't run and when I walk fast uphill my heart goes ballistic. I decided perhaps it was time to go see the doctor again. So I phoned up early on Monday morning and had an appointment for just an ECG this morning. The ordinary ECG didn't show much, just that I had an eptopic (unusual/unexpected) beat every now and then, well probably every 5 beats actually.
Fact is, day to day I feel fine, it's just when I exert myself that I feel shody. So they put the ECG cables back on and put me on a treadmill. After 3/4mins I was walking fast at a relatively steep gradient and I could see the ECG measuring between 180 and 210 beats per minute. My heart should never go that fast! Anyway, I think what happens then is my blood pressure drops and I start to feel terrible. So once I'd cooled off I went to speak to the doc again and he said he thinks the bad signals are originating in one of my pulmonary veins and that I should go see an electrophysiologist (I think) to talk about a possible PVI (Pulmonary Vein Isolation). Another option however is a drug which I mentioned in an earlier post which modifies heart rythm but is only available in SA towards the end of the year, not too long to wait I guess...BUT if I'm on those drugs I'm on them for life, if I have a successful PVI then I won't need those specific drugs.
Decisions decisions. Whats happening in the meantime is I am already preparing for ANOTHER cardioversion on Friday. I'm taking amiodarone which is the nasty brother of the other drug coming onto the market. So hopefully things will be better again by the weekend. Whats more I seem to have picked up another cold which is getting me down a bit. Oh well, I think I'll get into bed and try write some software, or some thesis.
Fact is, day to day I feel fine, it's just when I exert myself that I feel shody. So they put the ECG cables back on and put me on a treadmill. After 3/4mins I was walking fast at a relatively steep gradient and I could see the ECG measuring between 180 and 210 beats per minute. My heart should never go that fast! Anyway, I think what happens then is my blood pressure drops and I start to feel terrible. So once I'd cooled off I went to speak to the doc again and he said he thinks the bad signals are originating in one of my pulmonary veins and that I should go see an electrophysiologist (I think) to talk about a possible PVI (Pulmonary Vein Isolation). Another option however is a drug which I mentioned in an earlier post which modifies heart rythm but is only available in SA towards the end of the year, not too long to wait I guess...BUT if I'm on those drugs I'm on them for life, if I have a successful PVI then I won't need those specific drugs.
Decisions decisions. Whats happening in the meantime is I am already preparing for ANOTHER cardioversion on Friday. I'm taking amiodarone which is the nasty brother of the other drug coming onto the market. So hopefully things will be better again by the weekend. Whats more I seem to have picked up another cold which is getting me down a bit. Oh well, I think I'll get into bed and try write some software, or some thesis.
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