mn2mx
Member
I recently went in to my primary care physician for a pre op physical for partial/total right knee replacement. During the course of my physical she heard a pronounced murmur where there had only been a slight one in the past. For 30 years I've been told that I had a mitral valve prolapse...and, as a fact, tried to give blood the summer after my high school graduation and was told I couldn't because of a murmur...I dismissed that at the time. It certainly wasn't found during my induction physical in 1968.
So, I'm at the VA, my primary care physician sends me up to get an echo...I returned after the tech was through with me and my doctor got me an appointment the next week with a cardiologist.
The doctor was East Indian and in his 70s...a great sense of humor, but he was what the VA calls a Locum...a temporary contract. I'm 63 years old, btw. He told me that my aortic valve was stenosed and had a 1.2 cm opening...and that when it got to 0.8 I would need surgery...he also said the rate of degeneration was 0.1/year...but then said I would need surgery in 6 or 7 years. He wasn't good at math. This was three months ago. I was given a scrip for pravastatin and losartin. (I've been on atenolol since it first came out in 1979 or so). My cholesterol wasn't really high, my bp tends to run high around white coats...except for my primary physician whom I've known since 1990.
Last week I had an appointment with the staff cardiologist at the Fargo VA. The East Indian locum was no longer there. The staff cardio said they found he had some cognitive problems. Great.
This cardiologist was pretty laid back, went over my blood work. Said my cholesterol and BP are fine and that I should have a follow up echo in a year. He also told me he recommends a mechanical valve transplant eventually and a regular sternum cutting procedure. The Fargo VA farms the surgeries out to the Minneapolis VA which is a teaching hospital for the University of Minnesota and (he said) has top notch surgeons. He said he doesn't recommend a bio valve at my age, and less invasive procedures have a higher mortality rate because it takes more skill and concentration on the part of the surgeon. Also my knee surgery should be put on a back burner.
Well, I can live without the knee surgery...but I know I can't live long without heart surgery. I'm concerned about a lot of different things, of course. What will the nature of the VA system be politically in 3 or 4 years? Will Medicare exist? Will our health care system exist? Will the country exist? I know those sound alarmist, perhaps, but I tend to be that way.
I'd love to think that great strides will continue to be made in procedures, with less invasive surgeries becoming the norm...with <1% mortality rates...
I'm in the beginning throes of my contemplation. I'm asymptomatic as far as shortness of breath, etc. I'm prone to panic attacks and have been diagnosed with PTSD in the past. I am a combat veteran of Vietnam with 23 months in the field. I live in the midst of a state forest in northern minnesota to be away from the hustle and bustle of the world. We have 50 acres and built our own home here out of native materials, earth sheltered and powered by photovoltaics. I'm not a very trusting person. My wife is a saint. She was an Army nurse. I'm her penance and she's my reward, I often say.
I'm not sure what I'm asking here...I don't even know what to think about all of this.
Thanks for this forum.
So, I'm at the VA, my primary care physician sends me up to get an echo...I returned after the tech was through with me and my doctor got me an appointment the next week with a cardiologist.
The doctor was East Indian and in his 70s...a great sense of humor, but he was what the VA calls a Locum...a temporary contract. I'm 63 years old, btw. He told me that my aortic valve was stenosed and had a 1.2 cm opening...and that when it got to 0.8 I would need surgery...he also said the rate of degeneration was 0.1/year...but then said I would need surgery in 6 or 7 years. He wasn't good at math. This was three months ago. I was given a scrip for pravastatin and losartin. (I've been on atenolol since it first came out in 1979 or so). My cholesterol wasn't really high, my bp tends to run high around white coats...except for my primary physician whom I've known since 1990.
Last week I had an appointment with the staff cardiologist at the Fargo VA. The East Indian locum was no longer there. The staff cardio said they found he had some cognitive problems. Great.
This cardiologist was pretty laid back, went over my blood work. Said my cholesterol and BP are fine and that I should have a follow up echo in a year. He also told me he recommends a mechanical valve transplant eventually and a regular sternum cutting procedure. The Fargo VA farms the surgeries out to the Minneapolis VA which is a teaching hospital for the University of Minnesota and (he said) has top notch surgeons. He said he doesn't recommend a bio valve at my age, and less invasive procedures have a higher mortality rate because it takes more skill and concentration on the part of the surgeon. Also my knee surgery should be put on a back burner.
Well, I can live without the knee surgery...but I know I can't live long without heart surgery. I'm concerned about a lot of different things, of course. What will the nature of the VA system be politically in 3 or 4 years? Will Medicare exist? Will our health care system exist? Will the country exist? I know those sound alarmist, perhaps, but I tend to be that way.
I'd love to think that great strides will continue to be made in procedures, with less invasive surgeries becoming the norm...with <1% mortality rates...
I'm in the beginning throes of my contemplation. I'm asymptomatic as far as shortness of breath, etc. I'm prone to panic attacks and have been diagnosed with PTSD in the past. I am a combat veteran of Vietnam with 23 months in the field. I live in the midst of a state forest in northern minnesota to be away from the hustle and bustle of the world. We have 50 acres and built our own home here out of native materials, earth sheltered and powered by photovoltaics. I'm not a very trusting person. My wife is a saint. She was an Army nurse. I'm her penance and she's my reward, I often say.
I'm not sure what I'm asking here...I don't even know what to think about all of this.
Thanks for this forum.