Stevebav - I hope that when you wrote this, you had a good employer and good insurance, so that you and your doctors can decide when it's the right time for surgery (and, if it's time, that you don't have to put it off until you can afford it).
Let me know if you get this. I live in Suwanee. I’ve just become a patient of Dr. James Stewart at Emory St. Joseph. I’m having TAVR on 9-5-19. He’s done 700 of them. He never flinched when I asked him some hard pressing questions. I basically was rude. He was unphased. In his 40’s, Harvard background. He was not going to use s Sentinel filter but I brought up research that supports it, plus I said...the Cleveland Clinic uses it and US News and World Report gives them 100% and a mark of excellence on all aspects of card. I told him I’m not having TAVR without a stroke prevention device in place.....”No tickey, no laundry.”I live in Georgia, in the metro-Atlanta area. I haven't yet had to undergo surgery (knock on wood). Since I was diagnosed as having a leaky valve about 6 or 7 years ago, my cardiologists (plural) have all told me that my condition has remained unchanged. I say "cardiologists" because I stopped going to my first one because I honestly felt like I was just being run through the cash register. In one year I had an echo-cardiogram, a CT scan, a TEE (trans esophogal echo-cardiogram). I was also being sent to see a surgeon, just so that they would be familiar with my file (I was told), even though the hospital has a team of surgeons who rotate and the likelihood of my seeing "that" surgeon if/when my time were to come was quite low. He kept seeing me.. every six months in the beginning, and eventually once per year. I had read that a condition such as mine, which is categorized as mild/moderate, should only require an echo-cardiogram every two years, not every year.
I lost confidence in my cardiologist and switched to another one who works in a completely different hospital system. I saw him once and he was also going to set me up for additional appointments, tests, etc., even though he had been provided with all of my previous test results, all of my records. I just never went back to him.
After a couple of years of seeing no cardiologist I went to a third cardiologist, and to be perfectly honest, I don't have full confidence in him, either. In the one year I have gone to him he ran an echo-cardiogram (which I fully expected and knew I needed), from which he told me that my condition was still unchanged. But six months later he ran a CT scan to look at the stub of my aorta, and from that he told me that my aorta measurement at the stub where it meets my heart had changed from previous measurements of 4.5 cm to 4.7 cm, and for that reason he wants to run an echo-cardiogram once per year. He only six months prior, when running the initial echo-cardiogram, had told me that my valve situation was unchanged. The "aneurysm" which they say I have at the base of my aorta, where it meets my heart, is caused by the exact same condition that has caused me to have a leaky valve. My valve is dilated, thus the "aneurysm", with the base of the aorta also being dilated with the valve dilation. My measurements have always been 4.5 cm since the day I had my first echo-cardiogram and my first CT scan. I became suspicious of this new cardiologist when he told me it is now 4.7 cm, especially him saying that the valve condition is unchanged. With that reading he says he wants to run an echo-cardiogram every year, which is what I think is unnecessary for my mild/moderate condition.
But, what do you say to these guys. You have to take their word for it... to some extent, at least. But, at the same time, the patient definitely has a say in the matter.
I have a fantastic PCP. I have 100% full trust and faith in him to be honest and not over-treat me for anything. Unfortunately, I cannot say that for either of the cardiologists that I have seen.
Thanks, Ladybug. I appreciate the references for those cardiologists. Unfortunately, I'm over on the west side of the metro area, just past Marietta. I appreciate the straightforward advice. I do try to not take my situation lightly, although I've been in a mild/moderate status from the very beginning. As my initial cardiologist said, I could have even been born with the condition. I just got really run through the wringer with what I truly believe were some unnecessary tests.. expensive tests.. and appointments, all which added up to a tremendous amount of money. In that one year I met my annual out-of-pocket maximum with my health insurance, and that is $6,000! I paid that out of pocket in one year, and it was all due to a multitude of tests and appointments (not just cardio-related, but mostly). Because of that I am wary of doctors' over-testing, shall we say, especially in the current climate within the overall healthcare system.Let me know if you get this. I live in Suwanee. I’ve just become a patient of Dr. James Stewart at Emory St. Joseph. I’m having TAVR on 9-5-19. He’s done 700 of them. He never flinched when I asked him some hard pressing questions. I basically was rude. He was unphased. In his 40’s, Harvard background. He was not going to use s Sentinel filter but I brought up research that supports it, plus I said...the Cleveland Clinic uses it and US News and World Report gives them 100% and a mark of excellence on all aspects of card. I told him I’m not having TAVR without a stroke prevention device in place.....”No tickey, no laundry.”
So his office called and offered me a 9-5-19 date and said he’ll use the Sentinel device.
I’ve been getting echo grams for years. One a year, then two years ago upped to twice a year. I am symptomatic with severe Aortic Stenosis. In mid May, I put on 12 pounds in two days. Took fluid pills to try to pull that back down. I have a cardiac cough and breathing crackle sounds when sleeping on my left side. Im in bed all day with exhaustion.
I’m not a big fan of doctors. I had a terrible botched up health mess in SC in the 1990’s and had to fly to Cleveland to have them bail me out. One of those SC doctors was trained at Emory. I shake like a dog going to the vet when I walk thru the doors st Emory. But at some point, you need to trust somebody, or it could cost you your life. I think you should be glad they are upping your echocardiograms. I research stuff to death. If you get into increasing issues, which you may only recognize as feeling older....you could die in your sleep. I’m not giving medical advice, as I’m not medical personnel. I’m giving life advice. Common sense advice. You’ll like Dr. James Stewart, and Dr. Greg Robertson at John’s Creek Emory is my regular cardiologist,..try him. I can tell you that you’d be smart to get those echo grams in the same place every year (or always get the disc and reports on your echo. The changes that happen over time is what they’re following. I snowballed down hill between two six mo exams, and had I not had a June 2019 echo gram, I would have been like the walking dead when they caught it. An aneurysm is nothing to fool around with. Good luck.
Yeah. But discussion about a sick dog is certainly more relevant than discussions about whether medical tests are diagnostic or preventive.I new, but I thought this was supposed to be a valve site, not a PSA site. And with all this fussing, no wonder we all have heart trouble.
I'm not sulking - just a bit disappointed that they left a post with incorrect information on the site, and removed mine.
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