Dorsai
Well-known member
Hi everybody...it's been a while since I've posted here regularly, so allow me to summarize my story:
In 2018 we took Dominic in to the pediatric cardiologist to be looked over and everything was fine. We took him in again yesterday and he has a 'trivially' (the doctor's term) dilated ascending aorta - 3.13cm, which is ~2.1 standard deviations above normal. He also has a low resting heart rate of 48bpm, which the doctor seemed to attribute to his general state of fitness and good health. I wouldn't describe him as an athlete by any means, but he's in good shape and regularly hikes with the Boy Scouts. In fact he just completed a week-long hike at altitude in the mountains of New Mexico and had a great time, no problems whatsoever.
I really wish I knew what my aorta looked like when I was 17...but of course I don't, since I'd never been to a cardiologist before 2009 (when I was 39). In the absence of that knowledge...I'm not worried that anything is going to happen to Dominic in the short term, but I am curious - have any of you been unlucky enough to pass your heart issues down to your children? If so, how did you learn this, and what (if anything) did you do with this knowledge?
P.S. The recommendation from the doctor is that Dominic come back in a year for another echo cardiogram, and that I get DNA tested for various things to see if I am the lucky recipient of something from my grandfather that I may have passed along.
- Diagnosed in June 2009 with an aortic root aneurysm - 5.1cm. No symptoms, it was caught by a very attentive PA during my annual physical
- OHS in October 2009 at Emory to fix - I was lucky enough to keep my valve, I just have a Dacron graft to replace the bad bit of aorta
- Textbook smooth recovery, and I'm coming up on 14 years of no problems whatsoever. If it wasn't for the giant scar on my chest I'd never know I had surgery.
In 2018 we took Dominic in to the pediatric cardiologist to be looked over and everything was fine. We took him in again yesterday and he has a 'trivially' (the doctor's term) dilated ascending aorta - 3.13cm, which is ~2.1 standard deviations above normal. He also has a low resting heart rate of 48bpm, which the doctor seemed to attribute to his general state of fitness and good health. I wouldn't describe him as an athlete by any means, but he's in good shape and regularly hikes with the Boy Scouts. In fact he just completed a week-long hike at altitude in the mountains of New Mexico and had a great time, no problems whatsoever.
I really wish I knew what my aorta looked like when I was 17...but of course I don't, since I'd never been to a cardiologist before 2009 (when I was 39). In the absence of that knowledge...I'm not worried that anything is going to happen to Dominic in the short term, but I am curious - have any of you been unlucky enough to pass your heart issues down to your children? If so, how did you learn this, and what (if anything) did you do with this knowledge?
P.S. The recommendation from the doctor is that Dominic come back in a year for another echo cardiogram, and that I get DNA tested for various things to see if I am the lucky recipient of something from my grandfather that I may have passed along.