Here's what Chatgpt has to say:
Based on what you’ve described — ectopic beats worsening with oestrogen (HRT), some improvement when stopped, and ongoing issues despite dose reduction — here’s a breakdown of possible explanations and next steps.
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Key Issues in Your Case
1. Ectopic heartbeats linked to HRT use
2. Symptoms not clearly tied to any structural heart problem
3. Poor guidance from GP and gynaecologist
4. Known MTHFR mutation
5. Trial of antihistamines not helping
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Possible Mechanisms
1. Oestrogen and Cardiac Sensitivity
Oestrogen can affect cardiac ion channels, autonomic tone, and electrolyte balance, sometimes triggering palpitations or ectopic beats in susceptible individuals — especially during dose changes.
2. Histamine and Mast Cell Involvement
Histamine intolerance or mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS) could contribute to palpitations. However, antihistamines not helping suggests histamine may not be the main issue, or that you're not targeting the right pathways (e.g., you may need both H1 and H2 blockers or mast cell stabilisers).
3. MTHFR Mutation
MTHFR mutations may impair methylation, which affects detoxification and hormone metabolism — this could lead to heightened sensitivity to hormone shifts or increased oxidative stress, indirectly impacting your heart rhythm.
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Who You Might See Next
Menopause Specialist with HRT and Complex Case Experience
This should ideally be someone very familiar with nuanced, low-dose or bespoke HRT strategies and systemic effects.
Ask if they consider transdermal vs oral options, or compounded low-dose protocols.
Some specialists are better with sensitive patients and can consider bioidentical HRT, if appropriate.
Cardiologist (Preferably Electrophysiologist)
Since your ectopics are persistent, even though structural heart disease was ruled out:
Get a 24- to 72-hour Holter monitor if not already done.
They can assess if this is a benign arrhythmia or something needing rhythm control support.
Ask if electrolyte imbalance or autonomic dysfunction (POTS, etc.) might be playing a role.
Endocrinologist
They can:
Assess for thyroid dysfunction, adrenal involvement, or other hormone interplay.
Help you understand if MTHFR or other metabolic factors are compounding the response to oestrogen.
Optional:
Functional Medicine Doctor – especially if traditional routes keep failing.
Genomic medicine consultant for MTHFR, detox pathway insights, histamine/methylation interplay.
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What Might Be Worth Testing (If Not Already Done)
Full thyroid panel (TSH, fT4, fT3, antibodies)
Electrolytes (especially potassium, magnesium, calcium)
Vitamin B12, folate, methylmalonic acid (due to MTHFR)
Oestradiol and progesterone levels on HRT
24-hour Holter or event monitor
Plasma histamine / tryptase, DAO levels (if considering MCAS)
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Some Practical Suggestions
Consider switching from gel to patch, or non-oestrogen options if you still need HRT (e.g., low-dose vaginal oestrogen + non-hormonal systemic therapy like SSRIs or clonidine).
Work with a pharmacist trained in menopause/HRT to fine-tune dosing.
Start a symptom diary correlating ectopics, stress, food, HRT use — useful for spotting triggers.
Check if perimenopausal fluctuations (not just HRT) are creating ups and downs, complicating the response.
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Suggested Next Step
Find a menopause specialist who also understands complex cases and can work in a multidisciplinary way. If you're in the UK, consider private specialists like:
Newson Health
Balance Menopause (Dr Louise Newson’s team)
The Hormone Health clinic (Dr Nick Panay or colleagues)
Ask for a combined consult with a cardiologist if possible, or get a separate referral to one with arrhythmia expertise.