67walkon
Well-known member
On May 10, I had a CT scan at Shands to check on my aortic root and ascending aorta. The aorta is at 5 cm and I am scheduled for surgery to fix that, the root, my bicuspid valve (now at 1cm) and a maze procedure to take care of an old afib problem.
My local cardiologist finally called me about the CT report. It notes "there are multiple lymph nodes seen within the bilateral axillary mediastinal region and retroperitoneal region which are subcentimeter and more significant for their number than their size".
The surgeon at the teaching hospital at UF (Shands) didn't mention anything about this finding. The local cardiologist told me today that she wants them to biopsy some of those nodes. She didn't really say why and it was during a phone call.
To me, biopsy means looking for cancerous cells. It might actually mean something else and I will email or call the surgeon tomorrow.
Does any one know what this part of the report actually means?
Thanks, John
My local cardiologist finally called me about the CT report. It notes "there are multiple lymph nodes seen within the bilateral axillary mediastinal region and retroperitoneal region which are subcentimeter and more significant for their number than their size".
The surgeon at the teaching hospital at UF (Shands) didn't mention anything about this finding. The local cardiologist told me today that she wants them to biopsy some of those nodes. She didn't really say why and it was during a phone call.
To me, biopsy means looking for cancerous cells. It might actually mean something else and I will email or call the surgeon tomorrow.
Does any one know what this part of the report actually means?
Thanks, John