Hi. I am 67 and have been getting auras since my mid-20s, roughly about the time I was diagnosed with "murmur," which years later was identified as a bicuspid valve. I have not
yet had surgery, am generally asymptomatic, but with my ascending aorta having expanded to 4.8 - 4.9 cm (MRA vs echo), and changes in a few other measurements, I'm now on the there every three-month-scan-plan and the "not 'if' but 'when'" section of the waiting room.
I was always told these were ocular migraines, but in some recent searches I found some definition that differentiated between ocular and visual migraines. I'm not sure it matters - we're all experiencing the same thing.
Mine typically occurred multiple times a year (as in several, to the best of my recollection.) Lately, they have been more frequent: Monthly, if not more. (Not sure if there is a connection but I've also had an increase in broken blood vessels in my eyes - probably unrelated but
maybe others have noticed something similar?) That prompted me to do a bit of re-researching, and stumbled on a number of stories over the past year, such as
this one, citing a study that suggests ocular migraines are linked to atrial fibrillation, leading to strokes and other issues.
Yet, here we all are and none of us likely have been diagnosed with atrial fibrillation and we're still standing!
That has me wondering if for those of us with valve issues, even before surgery, t
here is another connection that the medical community has not yet studied or identified. My only "electrical" problem is a right-bundle-branch block, which was diagnosed in my 20s via an EKG and which I've been told is nothing to worry about.
Could it be oculars are also an indication of other valve-related issues? Doctors tend to be very myopic, with a "not in my backyard" attitude. Every now and then there is one with a much broader view.
I just put this out there because maybe there is a physician or research reading this who can connect the dots.
I was a financial journalist for more than 40 years. I like to think I can see things where others don't. I have really good medical care, a top-notch, thoughtful cardiologist and an exceedingly high-level, research-oriented consulting cardiologist (I take the belts/suspenders approach.) When the time comes it will either be CC or Mayo, and you can bet I'll be asking about this along the way, as I've been doing.
Best,
Herb