Heart murmur?

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Hello,

Thinking about getting my PPL and work my way up to being able to fly private jets. I developed a heart murmur around age 15 (8 years ago), I was diagnosed by a physician with a stethoscope. Would I have to have an ECG? What are the chances of this holding me back?

While we are on the medical topic I imagine these are not a concern but just in case...

I also had an orbital blowout fracture (broken eye socket). No damage to my sight, and I can actually see better on that eye (both are better then 20/20).

I have also had 4 or 5 concussions.

Thanks in advance!
 
Hello,

Thinking about getting my PPL and work my way up to being able to fly private jets. I developed a heart murmur around age 15 (8 years ago), I was diagnosed by a physician with a stethoscope. Would I have to have an ECG? What are the chances of this holding me back?

While we are on the medical topic I imagine these are not a concern but just in case...

I also had an orbital blowout fracture (broken eye socket). No damage to my sight, and I can actually see better on that eye (both are better then 20/20).

I have also had 4 or 5 concussions.

Thanks in advance!
The chance of your being " held back" are excellent. The Internet is not the place to answer it. Go to a heart specialist and find out for sure. And yes an EKG will probably be part of the checkup. They are quick and easy.
 
A heart murmur is a plumbing problem. What would you expect an ECG (which is for electrical problems, essentially) to tell you?

And sure, as part of a cardiac workup you would most assuredly GET an ECG.. But its not going to tell you a whole lot, if anything, about the murmur.

Plan on an Echocardiogram for that.
 
4 or 5 concussions. Are you accident prone? If so flying is not for you. Good Luck.

Given his inferred age of 23, I'm thinking either sports or a frying pan equipped wife.

But given that many times his bell has been rung, getting with a good AME will be key to ensure the wrong items or write up isn't sent in to increase the stickiness of the situation.
 
Thanks for the direction and advice. I wouldn't say accident prone, but yes the concussions are all from rugby with the exception of one due to snowboarding.
 
Give Bruce a call or send him an eMail. I had a similar question for him a few years ago and got sound, practical advice.

I wouldn't be worried about the murmur. No idea on the concussions.
 
A heart murmur is a plumbing problem. What would you expect an ECG (which is for electrical problems, essentially) to tell you?

And sure, as part of a cardiac workup you would most assuredly GET an ECG.. But its not going to tell you a whole lot, if anything, about the murmur.

Plan on an Echocardiogram for that.

Dear mr. " expert" get a life. You always get an ekg and they go from there. Some heart murmurs are benign , some are not . SVT is , for instance , not benign. You might get a holter monitor, maybe not. Wise to go to a good heart specialist instead of the Internet " specialists". Good health should come first.
 
Dear mr. " expert" get a life. You always get an ekg and they go from there. Some heart murmurs are benign , some are not . SVT is , for instance , not benign. You might get a holter monitor, maybe not. Wise to go to a good heart specialist instead of the Internet " specialists". Good health should come first.

And the EKG still won't tell you much if anything about the murmur :) Nor will a holter. Which is an EKG too. SVT is not a murmur. Its an arrhythmia. For which an EKG would be much much more helpful.

As I said earlier.. the EKG will get done. But don't expect it to say much, if anything, about a murmur. That will take other diagnostics. Those are matters of fact, not opinion.

I'd be more interested in discerning why the original poster appears concerned about having an ECG/EKG and what I perceived as apprehension regarding it. Is there a known problem thats not being disclosed? Or just apprehension about the unknown.
 
Dear mr. " expert" get a life. You always get an ekg and they go from there. Some heart murmurs are benign , some are not . SVT is , for instance , not benign. You might get a holter monitor, maybe not. Wise to go to a good heart specialist instead of the Internet " specialists". Good health should come first.
Whuut?
You got one thing correct. Some murmurs are benign and others are the result of structural heart problems.

And the EKG still won't tell you much if anything about the murmur :) Nor will a holter. Which is an EKG too. SVT is not a murmur. Its an arrhythmia. For which an EKG would be much much more helpful.

As I said earlier.. the EKG will get done. But don't expect it to say much, if anything, about a murmur. That will take other diagnostics. Those are matters of fact, not opinion.

I'd be more interested in discerning why the original poster appears concerned about having an ECG/EKG and what I perceived as apprehension regarding it. Is there a known problem thats not being disclosed? Or just apprehension about the unknown.
You are correct. A Holter is a continuous recording of a 3 lead ECG for 24 to 48 hours. It is designed to detect intermittent arrhythmias and I don't see where that is an issue for the OP. A cardiac evaluation usually includes an ECG which can show evidence of structural or electrical heart problems. An echocardiogram is usually necessary to evaluate a murmur although pediatric (and some adult) cardiologists can reliably diagnose benign or innocent murmurs in children and young adults.
 
Thanks for the follow up from a practicing cardiologist, Gary.

I will say this.. Im definitely not able to do much in identifying murmurs other than to say "its there" and "get an echo". I recognize my limitations.
 
the big thing about the concussions is
whether or not you have ever lost consciousness. That's a biggie with the FAA. the others are right talk to a cardiologist and give Dr Bruce a call
 
I have a cardiac-related special issuance and have a fair understanding of the way the FAA does special issuances. Get a diagnosis and see if it requires or is eligible for special issuance. The SI process is a bit of a pain initially but once established and assuming you have a cooperative physician it isn't hard to deal with.
 
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