Nothing much newsworthy. They did not do an echo which surprised me. I saw my surgeon 3 weeks after the surgery and I was told I was going to have an MRI but I didn't. Yesterday I asked if I was going to have an echo and they said no. I said do you realize I haven't had any detailed imaging of my heart since surgery (I had echo 2 weeks after 1st surgery) and they said everything sounded great and they would be able to hear if there was a paravalvular leak or if something else was wrong. I go back in 3 months and they said they would do an echo at that appointment. I'm thinking...I am on Medicaid and those tests are expensive so that is why they are not doing them (probably just paranoia on my part).
My only three issues is that my BP has gone from perfect (110/70ish) to borderline high (135/90ish). He thinks as my heart remodels it will correct itself but to take my BP several times a day at home and call if it gets any higher or doesn't improve within a month and he will add another BP med (probably calcium channel blocker).
My other issue(s) is a pounding heart and insomnia mostly due to the pounding heart, although I probably suffer from insomnia more than the average person anyway. They prescribed a two month supply of the weakest dose of Ambien to help with that. Of course when I went to get it filled Medicaid requires a doctor's authorization that it is medically necessary for a patient to take this. I would assume the doctor would not write the prescription if they didn't think it was medically necessary. Lots of red tape with Medicaid but without it I still may not have had my surgery yet.
So overall no big surprises. I was taking my BP because of the pounding heart and saw that it had gone up so I was not surprised by that news. It's weird because I usually only feel the pounding heart when sitting or laying down. I have been walking 2-3 miles a day most days and it does not pound during or after the walks. If I am up and moving around I very rarely feel it. But sitting in front of the computer, watching TV, trying to get to sleep at night...it is just pounding away. It seems the less active I am at the time the more it pounds. If anyone has experienced this or has any theories about this please let me know. I have 2 theories. The first one is the most obvious...by BP is up. The second one I just thought of. When I am more active my heart has to work harder which it is used to doing so no pounding. Before surgery my heart had to work harder because of the leaky valve. When I am inactive my heart still wants to work hard when it doesn't need to thus the pounding. Hmmm.
My only three issues is that my BP has gone from perfect (110/70ish) to borderline high (135/90ish). He thinks as my heart remodels it will correct itself but to take my BP several times a day at home and call if it gets any higher or doesn't improve within a month and he will add another BP med (probably calcium channel blocker).
My other issue(s) is a pounding heart and insomnia mostly due to the pounding heart, although I probably suffer from insomnia more than the average person anyway. They prescribed a two month supply of the weakest dose of Ambien to help with that. Of course when I went to get it filled Medicaid requires a doctor's authorization that it is medically necessary for a patient to take this. I would assume the doctor would not write the prescription if they didn't think it was medically necessary. Lots of red tape with Medicaid but without it I still may not have had my surgery yet.
So overall no big surprises. I was taking my BP because of the pounding heart and saw that it had gone up so I was not surprised by that news. It's weird because I usually only feel the pounding heart when sitting or laying down. I have been walking 2-3 miles a day most days and it does not pound during or after the walks. If I am up and moving around I very rarely feel it. But sitting in front of the computer, watching TV, trying to get to sleep at night...it is just pounding away. It seems the less active I am at the time the more it pounds. If anyone has experienced this or has any theories about this please let me know. I have 2 theories. The first one is the most obvious...by BP is up. The second one I just thought of. When I am more active my heart has to work harder which it is used to doing so no pounding. Before surgery my heart had to work harder because of the leaky valve. When I am inactive my heart still wants to work hard when it doesn't need to thus the pounding. Hmmm.