
ellievsbear
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todays bird
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tannertan36
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Peter Solarz

JVL

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will byers stan first human second
styofa doing anything

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shark vs the universe

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Misplaced Lens Cap
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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@hellohr
Like/reblog if you’ve fucked a cardiophile.
Steth Ring 🩺
🫀 Cardiophile ISO Audiophile 🎧
A character on Netflix puts on a pair of black nitrile gloves. My mind instantly thinks of gloved hands touching my body. Rubbing my lips before parting them. Pushing inside me. Pressing. Getting so worked up sitting here...
HelloHR ecg analysis by AI part 2
A follow up of @hellohr after exercise.
🤖 Thank you for uploading the exercise ECG — this is an excellent view of her heart’s behavior under stress. Based on the image and the layout (same as before: I, aVR, V1, V4 / II, aVL, V2, V5 / III, aVF, V3, V6), here’s a structured exercise ECG report and comparison with baseline:
EXERCISE ECG REPORT
Patient: Female, 38 years old
Weight: ~250 lbs
Activity: Exercise bike
Heart Rate: 147 bpm
Date: 23-May-1997 (from monitor display)
Lead Configuration: Standard 12-lead
ECG Speed & Gain: 50 mm/s, 20 mm/mV
1. Rhythm
Sinus tachycardia (~147 bpm)
Upright P waves in lead II — confirms sinus origin
Regular rhythm, 1:1 AV conduction
No evidence of supraventricular tachycardia or atrial ectopy
2. ST Segment & Ischemia Analysis
Anterior Leads (V1–V4):
V1–V2: ST segments are slightly elevated, but this is a common early repolarization variant, especially during exercise
V3–V4: No significant ST depression or T wave inversion
Lateral Leads (I, aVL, V5–V6):
V5–V6: ST segments remain isoelectric, no depression
Lead I, aVL: Normal morphology, no ischemic changes
Inferior Leads (II, III, aVF):
No significant ST depression or elevation
Slight T wave flattening in aVF, but not diagnostic
Summary: No exercise-induced ischemia seen. ST segments maintain shape and elevation/return to baseline appropriately for this HR.
3. Repolarization & QT
QT interval is appropriately shortened with increased heart rate
No prolonged QTc or abnormal repolarization noted
T waves remain upright and symmetric in most leads
4. Conduction & Morphology
QRS duration remains narrow
No bundle branch block pattern or aberrant conduction
No pathological Q waves appear during exertion
5. Comparison with Resting ECG
Feature
Resting ECG
Exercise ECG (~147 bpm)
Rhythm
Sinus rhythm (~85 bpm)
Sinus tachycardia (147 bpm)
ST segments
Isoelectric throughout
Slight elevation in V1–V2, no depression elsewhere
T waves
Normal, upright
Normal, with mild flattening in inferior leads
Conduction
Normal
Normal
LVH evidence
Mild voltages in V5/V6
Still visible, but not exaggerated
Arrhythmias
None
None
Impression:
Normal Exercise ECG Response.
Appropriate sinus tachycardia with exercise
No ischemic ST changes or arrhythmias
No abnormal QT behavior
Slight early repolarization pattern in anterior leads (normal variant during exercise)
Conclusion:
This exercise ECG is within normal limits for exertion and does not show signs of ischemia, arrhythmia, or abnormal conduction. The heart rate response is appropriate, and the morphology changes observed are consistent with a physiologic response to increased demand.
Cozy Heart Tour 🫀🩺
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HelloHR ECG analysis via AI
The following is ChatGPT interpretation of the image above of @hellohr.
🤖 Let’s take another detailed look at the ECG based on that configuration:
LEAD LAYOUT:
Top Line:
I, aVR, V1, V4
Middle Line:
II, aVL, V2, V5
Bottom Line:
III, aVF, V3, V6
Re-Assessment by Condition
1. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH)
LVH Criteria
(based on standard scoring systems like Sokolow-Lyon and Cornell):
S in V1 + R in V5 or V6 > 35 mm
R in aVL > 11 mm
Any lead with exaggerated voltage, especially in precordials
From the ECG:
V1 has a fairly deep S wave.
V5 and V6 (bottom right) show tall R waves — not excessive, but prominent.
aVL and lead I do not show exaggerated R waves.
Conclusion on LVH:
Mild voltage increase in V5/V6, but does not strongly meet criteria for LVH. No associated ST/T strain pattern either.
2. Ischemia or Infarction
We’ll look for ST changes, T wave abnormalities, and pathologic Q waves:
Anterior Leads (V1–V4):
V1: Normal R and S; no ST elevation or depression.
V2–V4: Upright T waves; ST segments look isoelectric.
Lateral Leads (I, aVL, V5, V6):
Normal QRS and T morphology.
No ST depression or T wave inversion.
Inferior Leads (II, III, aVF):
Slight T wave variation in III, but nothing clearly pathologic.
No ST elevation or Q waves.
Conclusion on Ischemia:
No signs of acute MI or ischemia in any region (anterior, lateral, inferior). Looks stable.
3. Arrhythmias
Now with clearer labeling:
P waves are present and upright in lead II — the best lead for sinus rhythm assessment.
Regular rhythm, consistent PR intervals.
No premature beats or runs of tachycardia.
No atrial flutter, fibrillation, or heart blocks.
Conclusion on Rhythm:
Normal sinus rhythm. Rate ~85 bpm. No arrhythmias seen.
4. QT Interval
While hard to measure precisely without calipers and known calibration, the QT interval looks normal for a heart rate of 85 bpm. No prolongation or shortening visible.
Final Interpretation (Based on Visible ECG):
Rhythm: Normal sinus rhythm, ~85 bpm
Axis: Appears normal (lead I and aVF both positive)
LVH: Not present by voltage or strain criteria
Ischemia/Infarction: None visible (no ST/T changes or Q waves)
Arrhythmia: None detected
QT Interval: Appears normal
Conduction: Normal PR and QRS durations, no bundle branch block patterns
If this patient has symptoms (e.g., chest pain, palpitations, dizziness), further testing like stress ECG, echo, or serial ECGs might be appropriate, but this single 12-lead looks normal overall.
🤖 Here’s a formal ECG report-style interpretation based on the image and lead layout you provided:
ECG INTERPRETATION REPORT
Patient: Female, Age 38
Body Weight: Approximately 250 lbs
Position: Supine (laying down)
Date of Recording: [Assumed Current — System clock shows 29-Jun-1987]
Lead Configuration: 12-lead ECG (Displayed as I, aVR, V1, V4 / II, aVL, V2, V5 / III, aVF, V3, V6)
Heart Rate: 85 bpm
1. Rhythm
Sinus rhythm at 85 bpm
P waves present and upright in Lead II
1:1 AV conduction with consistent PR intervals
Regular R-R intervals
2. Axis
Normal QRS axis
Positive QRS in Lead I and aVF
No deviation observed
3. Intervals
PR interval: Within normal limits
QRS duration: Narrow (normal)
QT interval: Appears normal for rate
4. Chamber Enlargement
No evidence of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy (LVH)
R wave amplitude in V5/V6 elevated but not meeting LVH criteria
No ST depression or T wave inversion (“strain pattern”) in lateral leads
No signs of right atrial or ventricular enlargement
5. Ischemia / Infarction
No ST segment elevation or depression
T waves: Upright and normal across all leads
No pathologic Q waves observed
No evidence of acute or prior myocardial infarction
6. Other Findings
No ectopic beats, premature complexes, or arrhythmias
No bundle branch blocks
No signs of electrolyte imbalance or pericarditis
Summary / Impression:
Normal 12-lead ECG.
Sinus rhythm at normal rate
No acute ischemia, infarction, arrhythmias, or hypertrophy evident
ECG within normal limits for age and body habitus
Role Changes
Ever since I joined the scene I have struggled with my role. Back when I started it was a shorter list: Dominant, submissive, sadist, or masochist. For the longest time I was only masochist. Pain brought me pleasure. I was able to turn chemicals already in my body into those of euphoria with just the introduction of sensations. Marks were my souvenirs from nights spent in dungeons and bedrooms. But as I get older and discover more about myself that role no longer resonates with me. So I finally took masochist out of my list of roles.
Current Roles: catgirl, Muse, cumslut, Succubus
catgirl - I'm a bit of a weeb >°x°<
Muse - I've been spending more time inspiring. Roleplay, photoshoots, dinners... It feels heavenly to be the desired participant in these activities.
cumslut - ;-)
Succubus - I have no problem starting things... and I will <3
I got so turned on today from a short roleplay that I soaked through my panties and skirt 🫦 Descriptions of touching me, applying devices, and the effects of things. I didn't even touch myself. So satisfying.
Heart Rate Monitor in USA: Frontier X2 is the world’s first and only smart heart monitor that provides real-time ECG. Improve your heart hea
It is really tempting to get this as my next heart device... Talk me into it more?
Getting ready for some fun while hooked up to my 12 lead ECG 🫀🩺
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On the walking pad while hooked up to my 12 lead ECG 🫀🩺
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Convention Heart
I spent the weekend at a convention. I wore my HR monitor everyday. My heartrate was pretty high the entire time. Everyday was a minimum of 15k steps. Walking the convention halls by day and going outside into the city for dinners. At times my heartrate was in the 140s while I moved between venues. I also didn't do a great job of staying hydrated. But it felt so nice to share my data the entire time.
First video with my 12 lead ECG 🫀🩺
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Now part of my kit: GE Mac 5500 ECG - 12 Lead
Out
I have worn my steth at a dungeon party before, but not more openly outside of that setting in the kink world. This past weekend I had a chance to be more out in the community. It has been interesting just having people find out cardio is now a fetish of mine. Lots of puzzled looks. But I mostly got compliments on my steth from people just passing by at the event. It felt nice. I did get asked a few times if I was a doctor.