Agian
Well-known member
Henna, I promise not to make a scene if the food is spicy. It happened in an Indian restaurant once, when I almost fainted. No sympathy from anyone. They didn't even call an ambulance.
Agian;n880169 said:I promise not to make a scene if the food is spicy.
Agian;n880169 said:Henna, I promise not to make a scene if the food is spicy. It happened in an Indian restaurant once, when I almost fainted. No sympathy from anyone. They didn't even call an ambulance.
pellicle;n880229 said:happy to ... where?
HennaD;n880231 said:India. It is just a short flight from Australia :coolhank:
That'll teach him to be a know-it-all. If he lets us know when he intends to visit, I'll call ahead and tell them he's a terrorist on Warfarin. Customs will ask him if he's on 'blood thinners' and he'll go bananas in the airport.HennaD;n880228 said:pellicle : You should join too
And for the record, not ALL Indian dishes are that spicy. It just so happens that all these restaurants which serve "Indian Food" abroad serve only such dishes.
pellicle;n880233 said:I know ... and its on the way between my usual migration path between Finland and Australia. I've been to India a couple of times now.
http://cjeastwd.blogspot.com/2008/06/oracle-10g-bootcamps.html
http://cjeastwd.blogspot.com/2008/06/rajasthan-jaipur-and-tigers.html
so its not out of the imagination that I'd visit again
HennaD;n880241 said:Let's not spam this post which was meant for serious discussion
amarG;n880255 said:Pellicle, I am the original poster. I was unregistered at the time of the original post.
to be honest these "mini sternotomies" seem to have little going for them from what I read ... aside from comforting those who don't ask questions when told its "key hole"amarG;n880103 said:I talked with the clinic again & its actually just a mini-sternotomy. So not a "keyhole" surgery that I thought I heard the surgeon say
That comment just broke the nerdometer. Face palm.pellicle;n880248 said:To me its a zombie thread and fair game for a bit of playful enlightenment
Guest;n878526 said:I am sure my question has been asked several times before, but I am new to this and would appreciate your advice.....
I am 52 years old and was happily unaware that I had BAV till it showed up as a coincidental finding on an echo last month. Subsequent MRIs showed significant regurgitation and some drop in LV ejection ratio. But I am asymptomatic and would have never know were it not for all these diagnostic tests. Very worried and trying to figure out next steps and I would appreciate your advice on a few questions:
* My Cardiologist thinks I should go for AVR "within the next 6 months". Is there value to waiting further since I am asymptomatic? How do you determine the best time to get the surgery?
* I understand the rule of thumb is a mechanical valve for younger folks. But I am worried about living with the chance of a clot or intracranial bleeding while on Warfarin. I read some papers that give the probability of lifetime risk of major bleeding as quite high. So wondering if a bioprosthetic & dealing with a second surgery later is an option. Has anyone considered this and if so, would appreciate your thoughts.
* I am originally from India and our diet has all kinds of spices that impact clotting - garlic, vegetables, fish etc. Wondering how hard it is to control INR with a diet like this.
* I live in Northern California and have been in to see the team at Stanford. Any Californians on this blog and who would you recommend? I am open to going down to Cedar Sinai in LA if that is a better option.
Thanks in advance for your help and if there is any other information or advice you can give this newbie, I would be grateful.
Thanks!
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