Marguerite53
Premium Level User
Hey there everyone!
I've been away for a long time. I somehow got the vibration to check in back in November when Ross was leaving us and was able to follow all of that. I even remember being up on a Saturday morning and remembering some silly VR discussion (with Ross) about scrambled eggs while I was cooking mine... only to then realize that it was the day of his memorial service. Maybe it's time to join up with the Facebook group so I don't have to count on the universe to tap me on the shoulder!
So I had a rather interesting Christmas which is why I am writing tonight (the hint is in the thread title). On December 21st I was running around getting the house ready for the grown kids to arrive. They had made the airport run to pick up the last kid and were off to dinner out together. I was making beds. I leaned way down into a corner to tuck in a sheet, came back up, felt a rush to the side of my face and realized that I could not see out of my right eye at all. Hmmmmm. Migraine? (I get the visual kind). So I wait awhile. No vision returning. Nada. Call downstairs to dear husband, hey, I think I need to get to the ER (I'm thinking stroke). So he wants to call the Ophthalmologist but it's after hours so we wait a few minutes for a return call. By this time I've looked around this last room and figure it's clean and tidy enough -- I'm outta here -- we're going to ER. The eye doctor actually meets us there in ER. This was a very good move on my husband's part. If general docs in ER had deemed it a stroke and given me the stroke medicine it would have been very detrimental to my progress (though I can't now remember why). Anyway, Ophthalmologist deems it an embolic event (stroke) that somehow (luckily) went up my retinal artery and not to my brain. All I have lost is the retina. It is a permanent loss - my right eye is blind. But we still have to know where it came from so I get checked into the main hospital as my children arrive in ER.
After 4 days and every test known to man (lupus? really? echocardiogram with bubble test -- say what? bubbles?? I do not have a hole in my heart!) I am sent down to imaging (2 MRI's and several ultrasounds) and the culprit is determined to be my right carotid artery. Vascular surgeons are then called in because the blockage is riding right at 70% (determining surgery vs. send you home with meds cut-off). Because the plaque is an unstable squishy kind, surgery is recommended -- fine with me!! So Christmas Eve day in I go in for an endarterectomy with bovine angioplasty (woohoo, more cow tissue). Post op the surgeon tells us that I was actually greater than 90% blocked. Christmas Day at noon, after one night in ICU they release me to my family (straight from ICU which was overfull due to flu patients) and I was able to come home and enjoy Christmas (with my new, 5 inch badass scar down my neck -- kids called it that).
I have learned a lot about everything since then (most especially about family love). In hindsight I was having trouble focusing mentally and might have been a little dizzy now and then, but clearly, not enough to bother a doctor about. The carotid on the other side is pretty clean. The right one was anatomically predisposed to clogging up, they think. I am overweight, have had a long-lived love affair with butter (now over) and had gone off my blood pressure meds (with doctor's permission). I did not take any statins though they had been recommended to me due to mildly elevated cholesterol. Every doctor encountered in my hospital stay said that I was not, not, not a stroke candidate. My numbers "did not present as someone" at risk of stroke.
So my question to you guys out there is.... has anyone else had experience with carotid surgery? I'd love to hear your story.
Because if it is something that they need to delve into further (I have googled and found a few studies) then I want to get back on this forum here and make sure that everyone with Aortic Stenosis has their carotids listened to carefully at exams, and possibly give a thought to requesting ultrasounds.
And if there are any other "one-eyed Wanda"s out there -- please shout out and say hello!! It's been 2 months now and I'm still not driving. I'm probably going to get a prosthetic contact lens to block out the remaining dancing light in my blind eye (completely opaque lens). Other than that, it's a lot of dumb blonde jokes as I run into walls in the house or pour coffee on the kitchen counter (no depth perception), but I really am adjusting just fine. I'm on a bowling league and after the mandatory 6 weeks off (post surgery) I've come back with a roar and am bowling 40-70 pins better than average each week!! haha! Crazy good!
It is what it is, eh?
Thanks for listening.
Marguerite
I've been away for a long time. I somehow got the vibration to check in back in November when Ross was leaving us and was able to follow all of that. I even remember being up on a Saturday morning and remembering some silly VR discussion (with Ross) about scrambled eggs while I was cooking mine... only to then realize that it was the day of his memorial service. Maybe it's time to join up with the Facebook group so I don't have to count on the universe to tap me on the shoulder!
So I had a rather interesting Christmas which is why I am writing tonight (the hint is in the thread title). On December 21st I was running around getting the house ready for the grown kids to arrive. They had made the airport run to pick up the last kid and were off to dinner out together. I was making beds. I leaned way down into a corner to tuck in a sheet, came back up, felt a rush to the side of my face and realized that I could not see out of my right eye at all. Hmmmmm. Migraine? (I get the visual kind). So I wait awhile. No vision returning. Nada. Call downstairs to dear husband, hey, I think I need to get to the ER (I'm thinking stroke). So he wants to call the Ophthalmologist but it's after hours so we wait a few minutes for a return call. By this time I've looked around this last room and figure it's clean and tidy enough -- I'm outta here -- we're going to ER. The eye doctor actually meets us there in ER. This was a very good move on my husband's part. If general docs in ER had deemed it a stroke and given me the stroke medicine it would have been very detrimental to my progress (though I can't now remember why). Anyway, Ophthalmologist deems it an embolic event (stroke) that somehow (luckily) went up my retinal artery and not to my brain. All I have lost is the retina. It is a permanent loss - my right eye is blind. But we still have to know where it came from so I get checked into the main hospital as my children arrive in ER.
After 4 days and every test known to man (lupus? really? echocardiogram with bubble test -- say what? bubbles?? I do not have a hole in my heart!) I am sent down to imaging (2 MRI's and several ultrasounds) and the culprit is determined to be my right carotid artery. Vascular surgeons are then called in because the blockage is riding right at 70% (determining surgery vs. send you home with meds cut-off). Because the plaque is an unstable squishy kind, surgery is recommended -- fine with me!! So Christmas Eve day in I go in for an endarterectomy with bovine angioplasty (woohoo, more cow tissue). Post op the surgeon tells us that I was actually greater than 90% blocked. Christmas Day at noon, after one night in ICU they release me to my family (straight from ICU which was overfull due to flu patients) and I was able to come home and enjoy Christmas (with my new, 5 inch badass scar down my neck -- kids called it that).
I have learned a lot about everything since then (most especially about family love). In hindsight I was having trouble focusing mentally and might have been a little dizzy now and then, but clearly, not enough to bother a doctor about. The carotid on the other side is pretty clean. The right one was anatomically predisposed to clogging up, they think. I am overweight, have had a long-lived love affair with butter (now over) and had gone off my blood pressure meds (with doctor's permission). I did not take any statins though they had been recommended to me due to mildly elevated cholesterol. Every doctor encountered in my hospital stay said that I was not, not, not a stroke candidate. My numbers "did not present as someone" at risk of stroke.
So my question to you guys out there is.... has anyone else had experience with carotid surgery? I'd love to hear your story.
Because if it is something that they need to delve into further (I have googled and found a few studies) then I want to get back on this forum here and make sure that everyone with Aortic Stenosis has their carotids listened to carefully at exams, and possibly give a thought to requesting ultrasounds.
And if there are any other "one-eyed Wanda"s out there -- please shout out and say hello!! It's been 2 months now and I'm still not driving. I'm probably going to get a prosthetic contact lens to block out the remaining dancing light in my blind eye (completely opaque lens). Other than that, it's a lot of dumb blonde jokes as I run into walls in the house or pour coffee on the kitchen counter (no depth perception), but I really am adjusting just fine. I'm on a bowling league and after the mandatory 6 weeks off (post surgery) I've come back with a roar and am bowling 40-70 pins better than average each week!! haha! Crazy good!
It is what it is, eh?
Thanks for listening.
Marguerite