Blueskytoo
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
From the above study:
Yes, I don't think we have to see the orthostatic tachycardia itself as pathologic. It may well be a very normal and helpful reaction to some sort of stressor - to blood or oxygen not getting to where it needs to get to, for example.
This is my thinking as well. I have POTS, but my HR goes up a lot on bad days and not very much on better days. My resting HR is between 48 and 52, and on a bad day it will go up to over 100 when I stand up. But what really makes me think that my poor body is actually doing its best to keep me conscious is that I have postural hypertension too - when I had my tilt table test, my BP shot up from its normal 120/70 (bang on for my age) to 200/140 within about a minute of being upright. I
I had no idea this was happening so I’m very glad I had the test (and now I’m on meds for high blood pressure, annoyingly, even though technically I only need them when I’m upright!), but it makes sense as a physiological response if you consider that the rise in heart rate I might be your brain doing its best to keep itself oxygenated. A rise in BP would also do the same thing - my blood pools in my legs and feet really easily, to the point where my feet are blue within a very short time after standing, so I would assume that my rise in blood pressure is my brain telling my cardiovascular system that it’s not getting enough blood up there and thus squeezing everything as much as it can to try and shunt some oxygen upwards. So actually it’s reacting in an entirely sensible way. The real issue, of course, is why it needs to do all of that in the first place….