Hi folks,
It seams like the more I learn, the more I wonder. I wonder if any of you have had experiences with test results being inconsistent and how you deal with it. I just had a catheterization test done because my last echo tests indicated I was approaching the serious stage of aortic stenosis. The cat test results shows my stenosis has NOT progress to the serious stage. I guess this would be good news had I not received such inconsistent data.
The Cat. doctor told me before the test was performed that he didn't expect the results to show anything different than the echo tests. The echo tests had the valve area at .8, then when the cat showed it to be a 1.4, I asked why such a difference. His answer was that often echo tests can be wrong if the technician does not position the prob correctly. He also told me that my stenosis is not the cause of my symptoms - that I should go back to my GP to determine the cause. In the last 18 months, I have had three echo tests showing the valve area go from 1.3 to 1.0, to .8 and have a hard time believing that three tests were wrong.
Also, I found that the local cardiologist I have been seeing who ordered the cat test told me the criteria for surgery is when the valve area is at .8 or less. The cat doctor told me that they use three metrics to determine when surgery should be done: the valve area, the gradient, that the EF (heart pump he called it). Also, I found out that the local cardiologist specializes in cardiac Electrophysiology, which is pacemakers and other devices. I was asked why I was not seeing a regular cardiologist. I didn't have an answer for that.[FONT=Verdana, Lucida, Geneva, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif] [/FONT]
So, if I believe the cat test results, surgery is not near. However, having an mathematical mind and engineering background, getting inconsistent answers and data troubles me. Also, I am now wondering if I am imaging my symptoms or is there something else causing them or is the stenosis causing it and the data is just inconsistent.
I will be asking my GP, who I trust more than any of the cardiologist I have seen, to advise me as to what I should do: seek another cardiologist, wait more, or do more tests?
Have any of you encountered such variation of tests results.
Confused and wondering.
It seams like the more I learn, the more I wonder. I wonder if any of you have had experiences with test results being inconsistent and how you deal with it. I just had a catheterization test done because my last echo tests indicated I was approaching the serious stage of aortic stenosis. The cat test results shows my stenosis has NOT progress to the serious stage. I guess this would be good news had I not received such inconsistent data.
The Cat. doctor told me before the test was performed that he didn't expect the results to show anything different than the echo tests. The echo tests had the valve area at .8, then when the cat showed it to be a 1.4, I asked why such a difference. His answer was that often echo tests can be wrong if the technician does not position the prob correctly. He also told me that my stenosis is not the cause of my symptoms - that I should go back to my GP to determine the cause. In the last 18 months, I have had three echo tests showing the valve area go from 1.3 to 1.0, to .8 and have a hard time believing that three tests were wrong.
Also, I found that the local cardiologist I have been seeing who ordered the cat test told me the criteria for surgery is when the valve area is at .8 or less. The cat doctor told me that they use three metrics to determine when surgery should be done: the valve area, the gradient, that the EF (heart pump he called it). Also, I found out that the local cardiologist specializes in cardiac Electrophysiology, which is pacemakers and other devices. I was asked why I was not seeing a regular cardiologist. I didn't have an answer for that.[FONT=Verdana, Lucida, Geneva, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif] [/FONT]
So, if I believe the cat test results, surgery is not near. However, having an mathematical mind and engineering background, getting inconsistent answers and data troubles me. Also, I am now wondering if I am imaging my symptoms or is there something else causing them or is the stenosis causing it and the data is just inconsistent.
I will be asking my GP, who I trust more than any of the cardiologist I have seen, to advise me as to what I should do: seek another cardiologist, wait more, or do more tests?
Have any of you encountered such variation of tests results.
Confused and wondering.