Hello. Thank you for your question and welcome to HCM. I carefully read your query.
I would start answering this question by telling you that these two findings (not enough
oxygen to the heart and palpitations) can coincide, but are not indicative, the one for another. It is only where there may have been a
heart attack that can cause ventricular enlargement and, thus, producing palpitations.
A palpitation is the sensation produced by a premature ventricular beat or extrasystole or "skipped heart beat". This
ectopic beat is not generated from the sinus node, the original pacemaker of the heart, but from an area elsewhere in the heart muscle. It causes a short pause after happening, and the next beat is normal, pounding and more forceful. This phenomenon, accompanied with
shortness of breath, the sense that the heart is "jumping out of the chest" or "throat" is a palpitation. They can be sensed by any human being, after vigorous physical activity,
hormonal changes in the system during a day, and psychological factors, such as
stress,
anxiety, panic etc.
With all of this said, if this remains a worrisome and abnormal finding to you, then I would recommend a 24-hour rhythm monitor, to evaluate and decide if these phenomena happen often, do they have clinical significance and whether the treatment is needed to suppress them or not.
I hope I have been of help.
My regards,
Dr. Meriton