The Case of the Mysterious Alarm

Lynn's picture
Submitted by Lynn on Mon, 10/08/2007 - 5:54am.

I am a very light sleeper. Very light. The last three nights, right around 1 am, an alarm has gone off in our bedroom. It was a high-low tone, like a European police siren, but soft. There was only one thing that I knew of in my room that would produce a sound like that:

My ICD/pacemaker.

It was supposed to alert, if it needed to, at 10:10 am. But the way my medical care has gone, WHO KNOWS. Oh, I ransacked the room to make sure. The first thing I checked was my iPod, which coincidentally I'd brought up stairs three nights ago from its usual spot by my chair. I couldn't find an alarm clock on it.

So finally after I heard the tone again last night/this morning, I tried to find a sample sound at Medtronic (the ICD maker), but only found a note saying if you heard that sound to call your doctor IMMEDIATELY. So I did, and they said to call in when the clinic opened to have my unit tested.

I freaked out about what could have caused my unit to malfunction. The thought of going back into that hospital and having them screw around with my implant--it was more than I could bear. It's just too soon. I remember it all too well.

Finally John said, look, search on iPod alarm and see what you can find out. I just don't think it's your ICD. I found a tutorial on using your iPod alarm clock. Yes, it has one. Went through the steps. Found it, and discovered that the damn thing had somehow been programmed to give a soft, European police siren-y sound at, you guessed it, 1 am. I burst into tears of relief, and turned off the alarm.

I have successfully resisted the urge so far to throw the goddamned thing out the window.

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Kerri's picture

keep all electronics downstairs!

Submitted by Kerri on Mon, 10/08/2007 - 6:53am.

it's a nice theory but it seldom works. I try to keep most stuff out of our bedroom because it minimises the irritation when something starts beeping or buzzing, but my phone is our alarm.

I'm just glad it was the dratted iPod after all, but I can't imagine the stress was good for your heart anyway.

my lot didn't even wake up when the smoke alarm 'cheeped' to tell us to change the batteries... anything less subtle than a smoke alarm cheeping (other than a smoke alarm actually going off) is hard to imagine but they all had no idea what I was talking about the next day or why I'd been chasing all over the house half the night.

And why not let Medtronic know that a sample sound on their website or something would be useful to prevent iPods causing heart attacks in their patients!

Kerri.

HarmonyGlow's picture

Glad you're okay!

Submitted by HarmonyGlow (not verified) on Mon, 10/08/2007 - 12:03pm.

Glad you found the issue and it isn't health stuff!!

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