Hi
well there is plenty of good information above ... in particular **** identifies well this important pair of points:
I noticed that you are only about three months post surgery. I would make sure ALL of your docs know this has occurred because it seems very unusual that a stroke occurred at an INR above 2.......especially with the newer valves.
on to what you say:
LadyChicken;n881368 said:
I'm guess I'm not really sure if it was a stroke or TIA, but I like the sounds of TIA better lol. I did have an MRI and the doc said he could see the damage.
so then, this is not a TIA but a small stroke ... to my understanding TIA does not leave any permanent damage. So this is quite serious and its important to now take this information (and experience) and look further into it.
As has been mentioned do not assume that your medical team know of this, do not assume the information has been passed along. I would get back on the phone to your cheery receptionist at your surgeon and inform her of you having had a stroke and request (specifically, don't assume) that she pass that on to the surgeon as a priority.
But he said it was small, and the only part of me that's "not me" is my right hand. Can't write my name without it looking like my 8 year old wrote it lol. But I'm not about to complain about that, and I do feel lucky that nothing else happened.
ok, that's an indicator right there ... this is serious but you have escaped with only small damage this time, its possible that with some rehab work you can regain some of that neural ability (perhaps even it will re-emerge with time as the brain does that).
I use coaguchek(at my pharmacy) as well as a blood lab in between finger prick checks and just to see if the machine is accurate.
Wait, OK, so you were having finger sticks every 2 days and vein draws in between? So how often were the vein draws?
My range was 2.5 to 3.5 but was sort of changed after the mishap.
Ok, that's an unusual range for a modern bileaflet valve for an Aortic position ... its high. Please confirm if you had an Aortic (not a Mitral) and confirm if there is any suggestion that you have Atrial Fibrilation
It' now suggested that I try to stay closest to 3.5
in light of the above I would concur ...
They also told me to start taking low dose aspirin (why wasn't I paired up with this before?).
I'm glad to hear that and also raises my eyebrow as to why you weren't on that before. Especially post surgery (I didn't realise that you were still only months out of surgery) I would be asking pointed questions of your surgeon and cardiologist as to why (and don't forget to tell them about that stroke too).
im so paranoid now that I'm not sure I could go that long. For example, I went from 3.6 to 2.9 in roughly 72 hours last week with only a .5 dose decrease for 3 days.
I understand being paranoid in your current situation. I believe that now it is of great importance that YOU document your INR yourself. Document this as at least the weekly read (preferably any reading) and document properly and accurately your dose. Food doesn't matter much.
I would arrange it in a table (even on paper, but a spread sheet is better) with a column for Date, Dose, INR. Let me know if you wish and I can assist you with setting that up on (for instance) google sheets. If you have a Gmail account (or an android phone) that will be the easiest and most reliable place to put it.
You now need to also ensure that you are 100% solid in taking your pills. You can always make mistakes so you need to now put in place (if you already haven't) a system of :
- pill box for your dose laid out for the week (I sort my pills on Sunday night as my box starts on Sunday) and I take my pills in the evening with dinner
- have an alarm on your phone for about that time as a double check
- have the pill box where you normally eat and check it in the morning to then triple check that you took them that night
Missing a dose by mistake is a classic reason why you would have a drop like that.
As for a-fib, I've had just about every heart related test done on me in the last year, so id hope that they'd catch it if something was up.
ask the question directly and specifically and ask what tests have been done to conclude that you don't ... it could be "occasional"
INR can change reasonably quickly and there are many myths out there which people chant like buddist monks like "INR won't change over a week" ... its a crock
The thing to do is to aim your INR for the middle of your range. To know that there is squiggle in the INR over time but more than 0.3 INR points per day is not likely without say ceasing your warfarin. If you have your INR aimed (for instance) at 3 then your INR would need to drop to 2.5 to be "on the edge" ... weekly tests will show this up.
Please Personal Message me if you wish to discuss any of this. I'm in Finland at the moment, but were I in Australia still (back in a few months) I'd be able to call you in the USA as part of my phone plan. I can use Skype or WhatsApp to chat if you like.
Best Wishes