First of all, I want to express my sincere thanks to all members of this board.
My wife had an emergency OHS 7 weeks ago. The surgery, as sudden and overwhleming as it was, was the easy part.
Since the surgery, some medical professionals put her in the tight spot many times (esp. with warfarin management) and I was able to get her out of there all because of the infomration on this board . We thank you all for your generous hearts in sharing your experience and wisdom.
I took her to the first follow-up with the cardio and had some question about this doctor's follow-up plan that did not include MRI/CT.
Here are some background info.
My wife (age 37) had some discomfort in uppper chest, under the collarbone area for about a year.
It was never really painful, but bothershome (more like a muscle ache or discomfort) and did not go away.
She went to see this cardiologist 7 weeks ago and did the echo.
The cardio discovered a dissecting aneurysm and put her immediately into the ER at the heart center.
He said it was the first time he ever actually saw the dissection on the echo.
The surgeon showed me the CT image the next morning and I could see why the dissection was visible on the echo.
She had 5.5cm - 6cm aortic root aneurysm and the dissection everywhere (ascending aorta, arch, branch arteris: carotid and subclavians, and 1/3 of descending aorta).
In many sections, one side of inner wall was separated creating hanging flaps.
The surgeon did an MRI for additional assessment and performed 8 hour OHS the next morning.
She received 23 mm St. Jude mechanical valve and all affected aorta replaced with Dacron graft.
She had no prior cardiac condition and doctors could not say when it began except probably in the past 1 year coinciding with her symptom.
They said it was a miracle that it had not ruptured and the cardio discovered it before the rupture. All her life, she had an ultra low blood pressue (90/60) and that probably helped too.
They do not know what caused it and Marfan is the most plausable suspect at this point. They said they will test her for Marfan.
So we know that she has some form of aortic disease / connective tissue disorder of unkonwn cause. Surgeon did one more CT before she got discharged to make sure everything looked OK.
Last week, we went to first follow-up with the cardio who discovered her condition.
I asked him about the long-term follow-up plan and his answer was the echo once a year.
I asked about CT/MRI and he said they were not necessary.
This did not sound right.
So I asked about the annual echo: would echo include her remaining aorta ( thoracic-abdominal, and abdominal) and metioned that I read usually abdominal aneurysm is more common than thoracic aneurysm and she needs careful monitoring of remaining aorta.
He said just the echo on thoracic area is enough because other area was clean. Just thoriactic echo, no MRI/CT.
I came to the VR.com and found that annual echo is common so we could live with that.
But no MRI/CT and just the thoracic echo worries me.
It seems for members with aortic disease, their doctors also do the CT to monitor the trend over time.
Creed3, who is the same age as my wife with similar dissecting aneurysm repair mentioned having a CT in 2005.
And RobThatsMe's follow-up plan included the baseline CT and on-going CT to see if things stay stable.
In addtion I found the following info. at Cedars-Sinai Heart Center web site on Aortic disease
http://www.csmc.edu/3866.html#8
Given this information and the fact the surgeon did an additional CT before she came home, the cardio's plan worries me.
I'd like to ask members on their doctor's follow-up plan, especially from members who had aneurysm repairs.
I want to see if other doctors incldue CT / MRI scan.
According to the same web page in Cedars-Sinai (above the Ongoing Care section on the same page), echo is good at looking at valve function,
but to get more accurate monitoring, CT and MRI (actually better than CT) is necessary.
At this point, I am considering getting a new cardiologist or at least get a second opinion on the follow-up plan from another
cardologist (2nd opinion post-surgery, I never thought I would consider this!)
But if other cardiologists will be the same, not much point in looking for a new one.
MRI / CT is non-invasive (probably less invasive than 2 TEE she had done which made her voice hoarse)
and these scans seems to makes sense in my wife's case .
P.S.Does anyone know if St. Jude mechanical valve and sternum wires make MRI not possible?
She did get an post-op MRI at the hospital when the surgeon was worried about the stroke so my guess it it is OK.
My wife had an emergency OHS 7 weeks ago. The surgery, as sudden and overwhleming as it was, was the easy part.
Since the surgery, some medical professionals put her in the tight spot many times (esp. with warfarin management) and I was able to get her out of there all because of the infomration on this board . We thank you all for your generous hearts in sharing your experience and wisdom.
I took her to the first follow-up with the cardio and had some question about this doctor's follow-up plan that did not include MRI/CT.
Here are some background info.
My wife (age 37) had some discomfort in uppper chest, under the collarbone area for about a year.
It was never really painful, but bothershome (more like a muscle ache or discomfort) and did not go away.
She went to see this cardiologist 7 weeks ago and did the echo.
The cardio discovered a dissecting aneurysm and put her immediately into the ER at the heart center.
He said it was the first time he ever actually saw the dissection on the echo.
The surgeon showed me the CT image the next morning and I could see why the dissection was visible on the echo.
She had 5.5cm - 6cm aortic root aneurysm and the dissection everywhere (ascending aorta, arch, branch arteris: carotid and subclavians, and 1/3 of descending aorta).
In many sections, one side of inner wall was separated creating hanging flaps.
The surgeon did an MRI for additional assessment and performed 8 hour OHS the next morning.
She received 23 mm St. Jude mechanical valve and all affected aorta replaced with Dacron graft.
She had no prior cardiac condition and doctors could not say when it began except probably in the past 1 year coinciding with her symptom.
They said it was a miracle that it had not ruptured and the cardio discovered it before the rupture. All her life, she had an ultra low blood pressue (90/60) and that probably helped too.
They do not know what caused it and Marfan is the most plausable suspect at this point. They said they will test her for Marfan.
So we know that she has some form of aortic disease / connective tissue disorder of unkonwn cause. Surgeon did one more CT before she got discharged to make sure everything looked OK.
Last week, we went to first follow-up with the cardio who discovered her condition.
I asked him about the long-term follow-up plan and his answer was the echo once a year.
I asked about CT/MRI and he said they were not necessary.
This did not sound right.
So I asked about the annual echo: would echo include her remaining aorta ( thoracic-abdominal, and abdominal) and metioned that I read usually abdominal aneurysm is more common than thoracic aneurysm and she needs careful monitoring of remaining aorta.
He said just the echo on thoracic area is enough because other area was clean. Just thoriactic echo, no MRI/CT.
I came to the VR.com and found that annual echo is common so we could live with that.
But no MRI/CT and just the thoracic echo worries me.
It seems for members with aortic disease, their doctors also do the CT to monitor the trend over time.
Creed3, who is the same age as my wife with similar dissecting aneurysm repair mentioned having a CT in 2005.
And RobThatsMe's follow-up plan included the baseline CT and on-going CT to see if things stay stable.
In addtion I found the following info. at Cedars-Sinai Heart Center web site on Aortic disease
http://www.csmc.edu/3866.html#8
Ongoing Postsurgical Care
The continuation of medical treatment following surgery is aimed at protecting the graft, the remaining aorta, the aortic valve and the cardiovascular system generally.
It is also to eliminate left ventricular hypertrophy (thickening) and diastolic dysfunction (where the heart muscle becomes very stiff and inefficient) as a result of long-standing under-treatment of hypertension.
Beta blockers and other blood pressure medications, including ACE inhibitors and ARBs, are the best medications with the longest beneficial affect on survival at the present time. C
alcium channel blockers and diuretics may also be added as indicated.
A CT scan or MRI is done following surgery and then at intervals going forward.
The functioning of the heart and valves may also be viewed periodically by echocardiography. Good dental and oral hygiene, including regularly scheduled dental cleanings, is strongly recommended to maintain a healthy oral cavity. In summary:
- *Postsurgery MRI or CT scan benchmark
- *Annual MRI or CT scan check-up
- *Ongoing blood pressure optimization
- *PT/INR monitoring if on the anticoagulant Coumadin
- *Lifestyle recommendations continue generally the same as prior to surgery
Given this information and the fact the surgeon did an additional CT before she came home, the cardio's plan worries me.
I'd like to ask members on their doctor's follow-up plan, especially from members who had aneurysm repairs.
I want to see if other doctors incldue CT / MRI scan.
According to the same web page in Cedars-Sinai (above the Ongoing Care section on the same page), echo is good at looking at valve function,
but to get more accurate monitoring, CT and MRI (actually better than CT) is necessary.
At this point, I am considering getting a new cardiologist or at least get a second opinion on the follow-up plan from another
cardologist (2nd opinion post-surgery, I never thought I would consider this!)
But if other cardiologists will be the same, not much point in looking for a new one.
MRI / CT is non-invasive (probably less invasive than 2 TEE she had done which made her voice hoarse)
and these scans seems to makes sense in my wife's case .
P.S.Does anyone know if St. Jude mechanical valve and sternum wires make MRI not possible?
She did get an post-op MRI at the hospital when the surgeon was worried about the stroke so my guess it it is OK.