Jason2012
Well-known member
Hi All,
I am wondering if I can possibly sue someone for negligence. I'm really irritated about the situation I've been in for the last four years.
I will try to keep to the core points:
- In 2008, with no relevant medical history, I experienced a transient cardiomyopathy known as takotsubo cardiomyopathy after a heavy amount of exertion (I went skateboarding, and was pushing myself and showing off despite feeling winded, after having not skateboarded for years). I was intubated for days and days and on my deathbed (with some kind of assisting pump in my leg). I was transferred to a transplant unit, my family were told that I was probably on my way out (of this life). I was 28 years old.
- Needless to say, I had a whole basket of tests, including a TEE (transesophageal echocardiogram -- this is important regarding the prognosis I have today). On this echo and numerous (probably five) standard echoes my aortic valve was listed as "normal" (tricuspid).
- I have had rather debilitating symptoms since my takotsubo event in '08. I told my doctors about a new visible pulsation in the front of my throat (from the aortic arch), and I told them about the "fish out of water" feeling my heart has during activity. I asked them to listen to my heart or possibly look at it while I was doing activity, and that was like pulling teeth (I had to beg and plea and visibly irritate my doctor to even get him to listen to my heart after doing a bit of walking around in the office). He acknowledged murmurs at that time. I mean I did not have symptoms at rest, but many of their tests were done when I was at rest (with exception of one stress echo I had, and could barely perform for years ago).
- I had a 5.2 cm left ventricle in '09 (sometime AFTER my takotsubo episode -- "normal ventricle dimensions"). In '11 my ventricle measured 5.8 cm on the next echo. The doctor despite this enlargement wrote on my echo "no significant change"?
- Anyways. I went about my life, assuming that my heart was structurally sound. The doctor I mentioned before never scheduled me for a followup. I know that I have resp. in this dept., but the impression I was given was that I was stable/that I didn't even need medication (they had me on very small amounts of enalapril and a beta blocker wrt my weight at one point, literally negligible amounts).
- Fast forward to '12. I am living with heart challenges still. Some of my symptoms have changed/gone away/evolved (prob. due to remodeling), and my wife and I decide to switch to PPO insurance. On the FIRST visit to a PPO doctor, I was diagnosed with bicuspid aortic valve. The #1 congenital heart defect, a prognosis for which it turns out I have the exact symptoms of which I described to my doctors (they ignored many of the "feelings" I described, I could tell they thought I was being paranoid, and I know they made too many assumptions around the takotsubo event I had in '08).
How is this not negligence? Should I not be able to sue someone for missing this obvious diagnosis (and win I mean, not that it will make up for the fact that my heart has been put through unnecessary stress since '08 and is now enlarged)? I've been living a challenging life for four years now due to my symptoms, I begged and pleaded for these doctors to spend some time trying to figure out what was wrong with me, but they barely had time to see me for 10 minute followups (they did NOT put due effort into my case). Now, because I was not on proper medication, because I did not get a replacement for my aortic valve which obviously leaks horribly during exertion, I have gone from having a normal left ventricle to a moderately dilated one at 6.5 cm (1.3 cm enlargement in three years).
Thanks for your thoughts. :frown2: I am thankful for these forums. Even though this is my first post, I've been watching from the sidelines (and searching thread topics) for a few weeks.
I am wondering if I can possibly sue someone for negligence. I'm really irritated about the situation I've been in for the last four years.
I will try to keep to the core points:
- In 2008, with no relevant medical history, I experienced a transient cardiomyopathy known as takotsubo cardiomyopathy after a heavy amount of exertion (I went skateboarding, and was pushing myself and showing off despite feeling winded, after having not skateboarded for years). I was intubated for days and days and on my deathbed (with some kind of assisting pump in my leg). I was transferred to a transplant unit, my family were told that I was probably on my way out (of this life). I was 28 years old.
- Needless to say, I had a whole basket of tests, including a TEE (transesophageal echocardiogram -- this is important regarding the prognosis I have today). On this echo and numerous (probably five) standard echoes my aortic valve was listed as "normal" (tricuspid).
- I have had rather debilitating symptoms since my takotsubo event in '08. I told my doctors about a new visible pulsation in the front of my throat (from the aortic arch), and I told them about the "fish out of water" feeling my heart has during activity. I asked them to listen to my heart or possibly look at it while I was doing activity, and that was like pulling teeth (I had to beg and plea and visibly irritate my doctor to even get him to listen to my heart after doing a bit of walking around in the office). He acknowledged murmurs at that time. I mean I did not have symptoms at rest, but many of their tests were done when I was at rest (with exception of one stress echo I had, and could barely perform for years ago).
- I had a 5.2 cm left ventricle in '09 (sometime AFTER my takotsubo episode -- "normal ventricle dimensions"). In '11 my ventricle measured 5.8 cm on the next echo. The doctor despite this enlargement wrote on my echo "no significant change"?
- Anyways. I went about my life, assuming that my heart was structurally sound. The doctor I mentioned before never scheduled me for a followup. I know that I have resp. in this dept., but the impression I was given was that I was stable/that I didn't even need medication (they had me on very small amounts of enalapril and a beta blocker wrt my weight at one point, literally negligible amounts).
- Fast forward to '12. I am living with heart challenges still. Some of my symptoms have changed/gone away/evolved (prob. due to remodeling), and my wife and I decide to switch to PPO insurance. On the FIRST visit to a PPO doctor, I was diagnosed with bicuspid aortic valve. The #1 congenital heart defect, a prognosis for which it turns out I have the exact symptoms of which I described to my doctors (they ignored many of the "feelings" I described, I could tell they thought I was being paranoid, and I know they made too many assumptions around the takotsubo event I had in '08).
How is this not negligence? Should I not be able to sue someone for missing this obvious diagnosis (and win I mean, not that it will make up for the fact that my heart has been put through unnecessary stress since '08 and is now enlarged)? I've been living a challenging life for four years now due to my symptoms, I begged and pleaded for these doctors to spend some time trying to figure out what was wrong with me, but they barely had time to see me for 10 minute followups (they did NOT put due effort into my case). Now, because I was not on proper medication, because I did not get a replacement for my aortic valve which obviously leaks horribly during exertion, I have gone from having a normal left ventricle to a moderately dilated one at 6.5 cm (1.3 cm enlargement in three years).
Thanks for your thoughts. :frown2: I am thankful for these forums. Even though this is my first post, I've been watching from the sidelines (and searching thread topics) for a few weeks.