HopefulHeart
Well-known member
Found an article about 2 petite females (each under 5'4''). One of these patients is the same height as me (5'2''). She had an ascending aortic aneurysm of 4.8 cm. The surgeon who performed surgery on her is well-known Dr. "E" from Yale. He recommended surgery immediately at 4.8 cm. After the surgery he is quoted in this article as saying this woman's aortic wall was as thin as tissue paper....again she was only at 4.8 cm. This article is very frightening to me as I am also 5'2'', except my ascending aorta is at 4.4cm. I have not had many symptoms except for back pain once or twice. Sometimes I feel that heavy feeling in my chest but it is only when I lay down at night to go to sleep and it goes away. Plus it doesn't happen very often. My Cardiologist said it was just fatigue. I certainly am not having shortness of breath of symptoms as severe as this woman in the article was having, but I'm still afraid because I'm like her in all the other ways. I've been doing lots of research and have yet to find an explanation as to why someone would need immediate surgery at 4.8 cm. But her aorta was definitely in a severely diseased state according to Dr. "E" (I use E because his name is very hard to spell). Anyone else have any insight about this or a personal experience that they would not mind sharing?? The woman in this article did have a family history of aneurysms, but did not have Marfans. How is it that shorter people have worse aneurysms than taller people and 4.8 cm could be so deadly? I;m going to bring this up to my Cardiologist at my appointment in 2 weeks and bring this article.......feeling very afraid about this. Also, I tried to post this article but the system would not let me.