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Thread: I'm getting a pacemaker!

  1. #1
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    I'm getting a pacemaker!

    In a few days the doc's are installing a pacemaker to control my A Fib heart failure and one of the things listed in the documents is to avoid using a table saw. Is there anyone on the forum that has a pacemaker and has seen a real problem from using the saw?

    Don

  2. #2
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    Why wouldn’t you be able to use a TS? Cardiologist concerned about your fingers?!

  3. #3
    Curious to know, as well. My dad had one for almost 20 years and was in the shop all the time.

    Erik
    Ex-SCM and Felder rep

  4. #4
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    Donald, in normal use it doesn’t sound like it's a problem. (no hugging your table saw)

    Keep at least 12 inches (30 cm) away from your pacemaker:
    • Battery-powered cordless power tools
    • Chainsaws
    • Corded drills and power tools
    • Lawn mowers
    • Leaf blowers
    • Remote controls with antennas
    • Shop tools (drills, table saws, etc.)
    • Slot machines
    • Snow blowers
    • Stereo speakers

    https://www.bostonscientific.com/con...and-tools.html
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Donald G. Burns View Post
    In a few days the doc's are installing a pacemaker to control my A Fib heart failure and one of the things listed in the documents is to avoid using a table saw. Is there anyone on the forum that has a pacemaker and has seen a real problem from using the saw?

    Don
    Ask a bunch of woodworkers or ask your cardiologist?

  6. #6
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    I've had a pace maker for 8 years. The battery was getting weak so they replaced it with a newer version, about a year ago. I did not get any specific warning from the doctor. They do warn about magnet fields, and r.f. radition from things like motors and microwaves in the manual. Like many warnings maybe somebody without real measurements is overly cautious. I have 3 hp saw stop, a 1.75 up bandsaw, jointer,; planer, routers, all the usual portable power tools, it's my hobbie so not heavy use . I am still in a vertical position. A person needs to live their life.

    You will receive "Pacer check" every few months. Pacers store data and the technicians can read that data to check for for anomalies, when they occurred, how severe, and if is Pacer working normally.
    Last edited by william watts; 01-31-2020 at 4:02 PM.
    Bill

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  7. #7
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    Thanks all for the replies.

    I did speak to the specialist installing the pacemaker and she said no welding, other than that she didn't see a problem. I figured I'd ask others using shop tools what they were told to avoid. She also said it WILL be installed on my left, won't install it on my right side which is a problem for me since I shoot trap and am left handed/left eye dominate. Guess I'll be selling a few shotguns or having a recoil reduction system installed.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Donald G. Burns View Post
    Thanks all for the replies.

    I did speak to the specialist installing the pacemaker and she said no welding, other than that she didn't see a problem. I figured I'd ask others using shop tools what they were told to avoid. She also said it WILL be installed on my left, won't install it on my right side which is a problem for me since I shoot trap and am left handed/left eye dominate. Guess I'll be selling a few shotguns or having a recoil reduction system installed.
    Did you ask about shooting shotguns with it installed on the left? Or you can wear special glasses when you shoot that fuzz the left eye and make the right eye do the work and shoot right handed. I've seen this work with right handed people that are left eye dominant.
    Lee Schierer
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  9. #9
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    I'm on my 3rd PM/Defib. Shop tools won't bother it. Magnetic fields can. It will beep as a warning. I stay away from weed wackers, chain saws, etc.
    A couple years ago I had an MRI. Several team members were there just in case. It went well.
    Not sure about a shotgun though.

  10. #10
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    I have had a PM/Defib. since 2006. I am on my 5th. one now. I have used all of the tools listed above with no problems. I don't go thru metal detectors but I do everything else that I want to do. They give you a card to show people at metal detectors so they can scan you with a hand-held detector.
    Army Veteran 1968 - 1970
    I Support the Second Amendment of the US Constitution

  11. #11
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    The Boston Scientific page: https://www.bostonscientific.com/con...and-tools.html says to keep your pacemaker at least 12 inches away from a table saw. It isn't clear if that means 12 inches away from the motor or 12 inches away from the table. Also keep cordless drills 12 inches away.

  12. #12
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    It isn't clear if that means 12 inches away from the motor or 12 inches away from the table.
    This is likely to avoid the magnetic field of the motor interfering with the pacemaker. It is possible the metal table of the saw can act as an antenna for the magnetic fields of the motor.

    This would be my guess without knowing what has driven the medical community to include this warning.

    jtk
    "A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
    - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)

  13. #13
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    It's my understanding that most of the pacemakers when I retired in 2011 were located near the skin and programable via a laptop and an RF signal applied using a coil on the skin near the implanted device. I suspect the it could be the EMFs (electromagnetic fields) created by the table saw motor and the drills. Without knowing the manner in which the cordless drills are designed, they may use a high frequency oscillator powered by the battery to generate the variable speed drive for the motor.
    Last edited by Ken Fitzgerald; 02-01-2020 at 1:54 PM.
    Ken

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  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lee Schierer View Post
    Did you ask about shooting shotguns with it installed on the left? Or you can wear special glasses when you shoot that fuzz the left eye and make the right eye do the work and shoot right handed. I've seen this work with right handed people that are left eye dominant.
    I'm left eye dominant as well. No amount of lens correction will make my right eye work for fine resolution tasks. It's not a matter of focus, lenses can fix that. It's that the two eyes don't focus on the same point, so the brain has learned to give the right eye subservient and it's imaging information is given less priority. Otherwise, I'd be seeing double all the time. Because of a lifetime of this, even when my left eye is closed, it's very difficult to read or do fine work (like target shooting). The optometrist says that if my left eye went blind, the right would eventually perform better, but that would probably take a couple of years to happen.

    It's quite marvelous how the brain compensates for these things. The right eye still contributes to peripheral vision, and the images from both eyes are merged so things look 'normal' to me. the only real problem it causes is that I have no depth perception that normally comes with having stereoscopic vision.

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Donald G. Burns View Post
    Thanks all for the replies.

    I did speak to the specialist installing the pacemaker and she said no welding, other than that she didn't see a problem. I figured I'd ask others using shop tools what they were told to avoid. She also said it WILL be installed on my left, won't install it on my right side which is a problem for me since I shoot trap and am left handed/left eye dominate. Guess I'll be selling a few shotguns or having a recoil reduction system installed.
    That's odd, when my father got a pacemaker in 1982 he was asked which side he wanted it on. At the time he didn't have a preference so his was on the right side. Only later did he think about shooting.

    Over the 20 years he lived after having his first pacemaker one was recalled due to premature battery failure. I *think* he had to have them replaced every 5 years or so. I'm hoping the tech had changed in the decades since then. I think Dad's might of had some twin triodes in it or something like that.

    -Tom

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