In my previous post I stated that on Day 11 I was put on IV antibiotics. My notes reveal that I also developed a cough then. This took ages to go away, but did so before I came home.
On Day 13 I was given an echo (to check my heart and valve) and an ultrasound to check for possible pleural effusion, and the possible need for a chest drain. During the ultrasound I was found to have pleural effusion, but not bad enough for a chest drain, so I had half of the liquid on my lungs aspirated (a tube was inserted into my back to withdraw roughly 200 ml). Subsequent opinion was that I could walk off the remaining fluid.
My notes reveal that on Day 15 (whilst on the phone to my daughter !) I coughed up some phlegm and felt better for it. I was left with a bowl, and took every opportunity to cough up phlegm, as well as taking a nebuliser mask, to ease my cough.
On Day 16 it was decided I'd have a TOE (TransOesophageal Echo). I'll leave people to look up this procedure, as it was my least favourite moment of my time at Harefield. This showed my heart and valve to be fine.
By Day 20 it was decided to stop my IV antibiotics on Day 21, put me on tablets instead, and monitor this transition/switch for 48 hours. If all was fine, I'd be good to go home on Day 24.
And so it proved to be !
Final point : fairly early on I found out that my valve was not the Edwards Resiia I had expected, apparently as a larger valve was needed. Only on the day of discharge did I discover which valve I had. Are you ready
Paleowoman ? It was a Perimount Magna Ease 29mm.
Geoff