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Welcome! Introduce yourself!

Arlene Britt

Arlene Britt02-23-2017 11:20

  • 1.  Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-23-2017 11:14
    Hi everyone!

    We are just now starting to build our amazing online community. Welcome aboard this exciting new project. Please take the time to introduce yourself. I'll start!

    I am Andrea Baer, Director of Patient Advocacy here at Mended Hearts and Mended Little Hearts. I also have a son who was born with a congenital heart defect and have been a part of this organization since 2009. I'm also your community manager here at Connections in a Heartbeat! You can reach out to me anytime with questions or help. 

    Looking forward to connecting and sparking some great conversations. 

    Andrea

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------


  • 2.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-23-2017 11:20





  • 3.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-23-2017 12:00
    Hi Arlene!

    Glad you could join us. What a great way to give back with your degree and using it to fulfill your passions.

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 4.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-26-2018 10:21
    Hello everyone, I'm new to Mended Hearts. Last year in March of 2017, I had unexpected open heart bypass surgery. It's been a long struggle for me, not only am I facing  new life changes, I'm also learning how to control my blood sugar being a type 2 Diabetic. It all started having surgery on my left shoulder on Friday March 24 2017, I was recovering over the weekend, things seem to go well until March 27th on my youngest daughter's birthday I wasn't feeling quiet well. We celebrated her birthday with dinner, which I had no appetite to eat and everyone was asking if I was feeling ok. After dinner, we went home, and I fell asleep on the couch, waking up around 1:00 a.m. to a strange pain in my chest like I couldn't breathe, my youngest daughter was scared and called the ambulance.  I was admitted to St Anthony's hospital emergency. It wasn't until 7:00 a.m they took me into another room and I was met by a cardiologist. Did some testing and he didn't like the way it looked, so we did a catheral scan  which they put some type of dye in my system to see how my heart was functioning. When I was starting to wake up from the procedure there I found my daughters and best friend walking in crying with the doctor behind them. He said I had a big blood clot sitting at the bottom of my heart and 5 arteries were blocked. I was in shocked, pretty much numb. Later that night they transfer me over to Baycare hospital because St Anthony's didn't have a operation room for cardiac patients. I must say the nurses and doctor were very wonderful. The doctor came in the next day and explained my surgery. To be honest I didn't think I was going to make it, and in seconds I found myself writing letters to my children. It was hard for my mom, knowing she couldn't be here with me, but I had one uncle and aunt who flew to Florida from Palm Springs to be by my side. While I was waiting for surgery, I texted my close cousin from back home and told her only because she been through heart surgery not once but twice. She told me what to expect. At that time, she also was in the hospital too.  She had a bad kidney infection. After surgery, I was released from the hospital within a week and by the time I got home and settled in, I got a call from my cousins back home to tell me my cousin was not going to make it, kidney infection went to sepsis and  her organs were failing. Two days after that news, my family called to tell me she passed away, she was only 36 years old and fighting Lupus. I was devastated, and my aunt had to try to calm me down because I wasn't suppose to be upset in any way recovering from surgery. It was so hard. I wasn't able to travel either for the funeral. My recovery has been long and depressing. And here I'am today hoping to move forward in a positive way, and most of all to be strong for my children and grandchildren. Thank you all for listening.

    ------------------------------
    Maria Elliott
    License Ins Rep
    Allstate
    St. Petersburg FL
    ------------------------------



  • 5.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-27-2018 15:06
    I read your story with interest and know your story will be valuable to other survivors.  As a survivor, I am a Mended Hearts Visitor and would recommend it to  you as a  way to  give back to those who are experiencing what you have experienced.

    ------------------------------
    Wm George Hess
    Woodstock GA
    (404) 452-8464
    ------------------------------



  • 6.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 19:31
    You are a real trooper!

    ------------------------------
    KAT
    Columbus, Ohio
    ------------------------------



  • 7.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-17-2022 12:59
    You're a brave woman and I'm glad you are OK. Sometimes things can be a bit scary when we don't know exactly what's going on with our health but it's a good thing you have your family to support you and your faith to keep you strong. 

    All the best!
    Terry

    ------------------------------
    Terry Tannenbaum
    Boca Raton FL
    ------------------------------



  • 8.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-18-2022 07:34
    Dear Maria,

    I am so sorry to learn about the loss of your cousin.  She sounds like a deeply caring soul, facing her own serious and ultimately terminal illness yet taking the time to relieve your own pre-surgical concerns.  I don't know whether you're a spiritual person but I wish her soul well on its spiritual journey.

    As to your open heart surgery recovery, from one quintuple bypass survivor to another, you will heal and thrive as I did and have from my own surgery nearly four and a half years ago.  It will take time, so try to be patient, but it will happen.  In the meantime, bask in the sunlight of your obviously very loving family.  I am grateful for every day that I've had since my life saving surgery and I hope that you will experience the same gratitude that I continue to experience.

    All the best,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 9.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-28-2017 08:15
    Good morning, all! 

    My name is Nicole, and I'm in Arlington, VA. I'm a medical writer/editor (trained as a pharmacist). I hit my 6-month post-op recovery date on 2/26, just a couple of days ago, after OHS to replace a congenital bicuspid aortic valve (I opted for a St Jude tissue valve) and to assess a growing aneurysm in the ascending aorta. Surgery at Inova Heart and Vascular went well, and recovery isn't going too badly either, but I'm looking at (perhaps) another surgery for the aneurysm in the future. I'm excited to be part of this new community! 

    ------------------------------
    Nicole Van Hoey
    Arlington VA
    nicolemarie188@gmail.com
    ------------------------------



  • 10.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-03-2017 12:16
      |   view attached
    Hello! My name is Geri. I am a mom of an 8 month old named Ryner,  with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. He has had two open heart surgeries, the norwood procedure and a bidirectional bilateral Glenn procedure. We found out about his condition when I was 20 weeks. After he was born, he was sent to children's hospital. At two days old he had his first OHS. On December 22nd, he had his second OHS. He was not eating well by mouth after his Glenn so they sent him to the children's institute for a feeding program. He was there a few weeks but was not making any progress. They made the decision to send him home until his g tube surgery. He has been home with us about a month now. He has no ng tube, (he pulled it out) and it eating above his goal intake! His cardiologists gave us the ok to cancel the g tube surgery! Now he is learning, grow, and thriving everyday! My goal as a heart mom is to spread awareness about CHD and to provide support for others who are going through the obstacles and struggles that we went through! 

    ------------------------------
    Geri Hayes
    Monongahela PA
    (412) 339-9177
    ------------------------------



  • 11.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-03-2017 16:18
      |   view attached
    Hello. I'm Elaine. My son Zack has LQTS2 and will be 20 this May. He also has Pierre Robin Sequence which means he had a (repaired) cleft palate,etc. He's had many surgeries at Strong Hosp in Rochester and several at Boston Children's Hosp. I also have a nearly 18 year old daughter. Zack has struggled to cope with his diagnosis. It's really hard on him sometimes. He's a tough guy and really does well though given all he's been through. 

    ------------------------------
    Elaine Stickles
    Rochester NY
    (585) 723-9603
    ------------------------------



  • 12.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-07-2017 13:48
    Your son and my daughter would get a long GREAT! She was stubborn with her bottle feedings and just wanted food! She's now our snacker, all day long and full meals, since her pacemaker surgery in July she's been an eating machine. Shocking with only 4 teeth, she's 8 months post op and has been consistently putting weight on. Hallelujah! She and my 4 year old son, Cooper have Congenital Complete Atrioventricular Block. Cooper is unpaced and tolerating the lower heart rate well. Paisley did not and she was having some premature beats coming through, along with declining heart rate, failure to thrive since she was not gaining weight, she had her pacemaker put in July 29, 2016. 2 weeks post op she was full blown crawling all over the place! It was wonderful! So happy to see another CHD kiddo loving to eat now they feel so much better! He's adorable! 

    -Lydia 

    ------------------------------
    Lydia Howard
    Clovis CA
    (559) 917-2843
    ------------------------------



  • 13.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-31-2020 19:49
    Hey Geri, my name is Zach, I'm 28 years old and I also had OHS at 2 days old, your story moved me and I wanted to thank you for sharing it. I joined this group as part of a therapy exercise to address some of the lingering effects of the surgery that I wasn't aware of until I went to therapy, there might be ways in the future that the trauma from surgery at such a young age could effect Ryner and I only feel the need to mention it because I wish I had worked through it when I was younger and it hadn't been such a mystery to me when I was a teenager and young adult, I suffered with depression, anxiety, and abandonment issues for so many years before I got into therapy and was able to connect the dots back to my surgery and I thought I would just share that with you incase you see any of that in the future. I'm so happy that Ryner is still here with us and I wish you and your family all the best. Thank you again for sharing this!

    ------------------------------
    Zach Bryson
    ------------------------------



  • 14.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-09-2017 09:47
    I became a heart mom at 16 weeks (November 11, 2103) with my son.  I never realized how prevelant CHD was until my son was 4 months old.  I live north of Baltimore, Maryland.  I currently belong to the Baltimore Group of Mended Little Hearts.  
    My son was born with multiple CHDs.  Due to the complexity of his CHDs, we needed to deliver at a "big" name hospital.  My husband and I did a lot of research and chose the hospital we did because we felt "comfortable" with many of the cardiologists, the surgeon, the facility itself, and the locality.  We have a "heart" healthy daughter who is 4 years older than our son so staying close to our family and friends was our main priority.  
    Our son was born at 40 weeks and 5 days.  I was able to hold him briefly after birth before the took him to the NICU and get him all "hooked up" and do an echo.  Based on the echo, our surgeon felt it was best to do his initial repairs in a 2 step surgery (dextrocardia, transposition of the great arteries, ASD, VSD, and coarctation of the aorta).  He had his first surgery to repair his coarctation of the aorta at 3 days old.  The surgeon did a thoracotomy to repair not only his actual aorta but widen his arch using a corematrix patch (name of the patch could be incorrect).  After his repair, they took him off the medicine which allows his PDA to stay open.  They hoped his PDA would not close during that time.  Unfortunately it did so they went in and did a "balloon" of his ASD.  He already had a hole but they made it bigger.  They believed his ASD would have closed on his own.  They also felt his VSD would close on its own.  At 10 days old he had his "big" OHS.  During the OHS, the completed the arterial switch and closed his VSD and ASD.  Since they were in there, they went ahead and closed them.  They also "patched" up a valve (I don't remember which one but I believe it was his bicuspid- I know I am bad :) ).  They did leave him open for 3 days.  My son was released from the PICU less than a week later and was discharged at 3 weeks old.  We could not believe it!  He had bumps in his recovery but managed to fight hard!  We were initially told to expect a 4-6 week hospital stay.
    Since being released he did have two heart catheterizations.  The first was to balloon his aorta where scar tissue was building up.  He was 4 months old.  After this procedure was when I really got involved with local heart moms and saw just how prevalent CHDs are!  I was already a member of MLH and MLH of Baltimore main page but not their chat page.  There I connected with more heart families.  At 14 months old, my son went in for another heart cath to balloon his aorta again.  This time they also placed a stent in his left pulmonary artery due to stenosis.  As they went to balloon the aorta, they noticed a bubble.  Needless to say the balloon did not take place and our next step was another surgery.  At 15 months, our son went in to repair his CoA repair.  This time the surgeon was able to do end-to-end repair.  He was able to do a thoracotomy entry through his first scar.  The surgery was a success.  My son will be 3 in May and at 2 we were told not to come back for a year.  He is huge!  No one believe he has heart disease until you look at his chest!  

    ------------------------------
    Kimberly Bley
    Edgewood MD
    (301) 752-4241
    ------------------------------



  • 15.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-10-2017 08:29
    Hi Kim!

    Thanks for joining and sharing your story. You are pretty close to me. :) I'm a little East of Pittsburgh. So about 3 hours from Baltimore. I'm happy to hear your little guy is doing well. Let us know if you have any questions. 

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 16.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-08-2018 10:25
    ​I joined Mended Hearts Chapter 18 in SW Louisiana about five years ago. After having two CABGs, an ablation and a stent was unfamiliar with MH. Saw a "Medical Moment" on local TV news. Called and the rest is history. Have really enjoyed being an Accredited Visitor. The real reason I Volunteer is our grandson. In 2012 he received a heart transplant after many months of medically induced coma/LVAD/transplant. He is now 21 years old and doing great.
    Thanks to all who do so much to keep hearts beating.
    Chip Burns

    ------------------------------
    DeWitt Burns
    Lake Charles LA
    (337) 513-6926
    ------------------------------



  • 17.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-11-2017 07:48
    Hello everyone!

    I'm Renee from New Jersey.  My 14 year old daughter was born with Down Syndrome, she was diagnosed at birth.  The next day, a cardiologist was brought in because she was turning blue around her mouth and eyes when she would cry.  She was then diagnosed with Complete AtrialVentricular Septal Defect.  At 7 weeks old, she went into congestive heart failure, and underwent open heart surgery at 8 weeks old.  She had her surgery at NYU by Dr Stephen Colvin.  She suffered numerous complications after surgery, and spent 32 days in PICU. Some of her complications included a stroke, seizures, and an infection.  Drs thought her heart was infected, which she would have required a transplant, but she would not have been eligible because she had Down Syndrome.  Thankfully, it wasn't her heart that was infected, it was a UTI that was causing the infection.  She continues with annual cardiology visits, she continues with heart meds, but other than her scars, you wouldn't know this little warrior had such a rough beginning. She's stubborn, she's smart, she's sassy, she loves country music and singing, and she is all attitude! Looking forward to following along in everyone's journeys! 

    ------------------------------
    Renee Napolitano
    New Jersey

    ------------------------------



  • 18.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-16-2017 02:17
    I AM A MAN 76 YEARS OLD WITH SEVERAL INTERESTING CONDITIONS.
    I HAVE 18 STENTS IN MY HEART REGION, A PACEMAKER. 3RD STAGE KIDNEY PROBLEMS, BLOCKAGE IN MY LEG, IT IS SLOWLY TURNING MY FOOT BLUE,, AN ANYURUSUM. EF OF 34, DIABETS.  SEVERAL TIAS, MANY HEART ATTACKS I IGNORE NOW AFTER SO MANY, AND ANGINA.
    I STILL FISH TRAVEL, EAT WHAT I WANT BUT IN MODERATION, NO ALCHOL OR CIGARITES ARE BOUGHT BY ME, BUT IF WE ARE TOGETHER,AND YOU HAVE THEM, I EXPECT YOU TO SHARE 1 OR 2.  THEY STILL TASTE GOOD.

    ATTITUDE IS EVERYTHING, WHEN DEALING WITH PROBLEMS.  A I FEEL SORRY FOR ME IS NO GOOD.  GO, DO, TRY, FEEL AND IF YOUR BODY SAYS NO, QUIT.  LIVE YOUR LIFE. YOU ONLY HAVE ONE.  BE REASONABLE THOUGH  NOTHING IN EXCESS.  NAP WHEN YOU FEEL LIKE IT AND TAKE YOUR MEDS AND NEVER LIE TO YOUR DOCTOR.

    ------------------------------
    Buddy Isaacson
    Pasadena TX
    (713) 477-2796
    ------------------------------



  • 19.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-16-2017 09:05
    Hi Buddy!

    I love your attitude and the advice of "never lie to your doctor" is so important. I think sometimes people feel like they need to hide things from their doctor so they don't get a lecture, that's never a good idea. 

    My son is a CHD kiddo and he is 8 (tomorrow) and I try hard to give him the freedom of living his life to the fullest and not worry about things so much. It's hard though to "let it go". 

    Thank you for giving such great advice

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 20.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-16-2017 03:03
    Hi everyone!

    My name is Ashley and I became a heart mom at 26 weeks pregnant. My wonderful son Nicholas is 6 months old and has a diagnosis of tetralogy of fallot with pulmonary atresia. Since he's been born he has had a catheterization and 2 open heart surgeries with a few more to come in his future. Looking forward to connecting with you all!

    ------------------------------
    Ashley Molina
    New Jersey
    ------------------------------



  • 21.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-16-2017 23:30
    Hi! My name is Andrea. My son, Keegan, and his twin brother Aiden, are almost 4 years old. Keegan was born with Transposition of the Great Arteries (TGA). He had his arterial switch at 13-days old. That was after 7 very long days on ECMO.

    Keegan has experienced significant delays with speech (he doesn't speak yet), gross & fine motor planning/skills and more, but he's the happiest boy you'd ever meet. He's always got a smile! He's finally starting to notice his brother and they now play together which does wonders for my Mama heart. 

    I became involved with Mended Little Hearts when our boys were about a year old. I felt the need to give back to an organization that was there for us during some of the scariest moments we had ever faced in life. I don't want any family to ever feel alone in this journey. 

    Please feel free to reach out at anytime to introduce yourself & chat. 

    ------------------------------------
    Andrea Francis
    Lead Coordinator MLH of Greater Rochester
    afrancis428@gmail.com 
    (585) 905-9124


  • 22.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-23-2017 10:32
    I am an active participant in Chapter 312, Fort Myers. Have been visiting for 9 years and love it  - most of the time. It is tough for me as a visitor, to visit patients who have appeared to have given up. Much more fun to visit patients sitting on the edge of their chairs saying "I cant wait to get out of here and get back to my biking, tennis walking etc. We have about 115 members and 23 volunteers now and are growing. We visit 6 days per week, and presently are only visiting the SPCU patients in Health Park Hospital. As we build, we will add visitors to cover a sister hospital (Gulf Coast Medical Center) which does only stents. We are also planning to add 4 to six visitors just for the Chronic Heart Disease patients, who are in a different area in Health Park.
    We hold monthly meetings and have great speakers each month. Except, in August, we have a social luncheon with no particular speaker. And in December, we have a Christmas/Holiday" luncheon, with no particular speaker.

    As for the new site, I would like to see the removal of most of the original message - leave just enough to get the idea of the message.
    I belong to another similar Group messaging, and it really speeds things up to not have the whole message repeated in every iteration of the thread.

    I am readily available to any questions/comments.

    ------------------------------
    Joe Jansen
    Fort Myers FL
    (239) 461-0980
    ------------------------------



  • 23.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-23-2017 11:17
    Good morning, Mike here from Virginia. On Saturday May 3, 2014 I suffered a cardiac arrest in State College PA. Was flat lined (12 minutes). If there were not for 2 patrons who performed CPR, I would not be here. When I woke up in the hospital, the Cardio Team informed me I was the luckiest man in PA, due to the fact when the call came in I had 1/2 of 1% survival rate.  On the following Monday they tried cath lab on Monday and found I was blocked in 4 arteries at 100% and that I was not a good candidate for open heart surgery and that a nearby hospital said the same. On Wednesday of that week a defibrillator was implanted due to the cardiac arrest and I came home the next day to Virginia. Met with the local heart surgeon at the hospital and he fast tracked me for bypass surgery. The following Thursday open heart and a quad bypass was performed, I walked out of the hospital that Sunday...:)...Glad to be here...  

    ------------------------------
    J. Michael Lam
    Harrisonburg VA
    (540) 830-0210
    ------------------------------



  • 24.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-23-2017 11:19
    Hi Joe!

    Thank you for the feedback. I agree that it would be better to see only a small portion of the post and then be able to expand it to read the full post. It would make it easier to scroll through. Sometimes I get lost on which post I'm looking at by the time I get to the end. 
    I'll work with the software team and see if I can change some things to make that better. 

    And....it is hard to visit patients who seem to have given up. Although, I like to think that is the exact time we NEED to be there and help them. I know some of the hardesst visits I have made as a heart mom was to be there through the hardest and darkest days for families as they said good bye to their child. But, I know that is exactly where I needed to be. It's not an easy journey to be a visitor all the time. Sometimes it's really hard. Thank you for doing it and for being a part of the support that is so needed on this journey. 

    Have a great day!

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Director of Patient Advocacy
    Mended Hearts/Mended Little Hearts
    Grapeville PA
    7243967820
    Director of Patient Advocacy
    ------------------------------



  • 25.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-23-2017 14:34
                   
                              Hello all,

          I'm a member of Chapter 28 in Richmond, VA-my name is Vaughn. On Feb. 27 2015 I had a triple bypass performed and left the hospital wearing a "Life Vest"--I've since had a ICD implanted. As you guys know the surgery is a life changer in many ways. I felt pretty bad about the way i'd been treating myself. So I've since changed what and how much I eat and exercise regularly, i've lost about 50 pounds and quit a 2-3 pack cigarette habit--it wasn't easy but I'm glad i did it. It was during my recovery at home that I found out about Mended Hearts and joined. I'm feeling pretty good these days and it's really great to be a part of a group who understand how to live with heart disease. Hope to "see" you all in the forum.                                      
                                                                                                                                                               Vaughn

    ------------------------------
    Vaughn from Virginia
    ------------------------------



  • 26.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 01:41
    Hi Vaughn. I'm trying to scroll through messages on this mended hearts site I joined in hopes of finding some thing or some one to pull my boyfriend along. He's miserable and pissed that he ever let the doctors talk him into doing an open heart surgery. He used to have land in VA but what really caught my attention was that shepherd in your pic. We have one, the love of our lives, and before his heart attack, he was training him religiously. I've managed to turn the shepherd into a spoiled snuggle beast since then. 
    Im wondering if you'd be willing to give him a call? He won't do this online chatting forum stuff. He is sick and tired of me. And if I try to give suggestions... he calls me out, that I don't know what it's like to have my chest split open. (& I actually enjoy the diet he should be eating. So dinner is only a pleasure for one of us)

    ------------------------------
    Jessica "Moonbeam" Gold
    Devoted pain in the a** to heart disease patient with no patience
    Denver of the east (NC)
    jessicamoonbeam@gmail.com
    ------------------------------



  • 27.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 08:54
    Jessica,

    Before my quintuple bypass I saw the primary question as; Hoe much do I want to live?

    After the surgery I saw it as: How do I want to live? The choices were (1) restart the cycle that got me there by not changing my lifestyle, (2) partially comply changes and live a modified lifestyle, or (3) embrace changes and enjoy a new, improved lifestyle. To me it was an easy choice. 
    While my mobility was limited I analyzed the process the same way I would have prepared for a trial as I had done for 30 years as a lawyer.
    As I lived it I saw a theme: in the beginning the effort is primarily physical, but as it progresses it becomes more mental: much more.
    I found the steps were (1) the physicians doing their magic, (2) establishing a safe and secure structure to function, (3) establishing a social structure, (4) establishing self esteem and (5) expanding your life. In general, the initial steps can take 6 months and the last couple another 6.
    My typing skills limit my response, but details can be found at my website OneHeartTwoLivescom.wordpress.com

    My story began January 10, 2007, when my heart stopped. Today at age 76, I plan on playing golf, again, and have no restrictions.

    Good luck.

    Brent Zepke 


    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    (805) 698-4651
    ------------------------------



  • 28.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 10:47
    Dear Jennifer,

    I want to underscore Brent's words of wisdom.  Please ask your boyfriend to go to the website www.aliveday.com and read some of the stories.  And its not just about soldiers who survived traumatic combat injuries.  Anyone can have an Alive Day, especially open heart surgery survivors like us.  My Alive Day is February 13, 2018, when I survived quintuple bypass surgery, one day after a supposedly mild heart attack, that led to my being placed in a two week medically induced coma to fight off a pneumonia infection.

    I was weak as a baby when I awoke, couldn't even raise a fork to my mouth to feed myself and couldn't walk unaided until three weeks later after inpatient physical therapy.  Now, nearly a year and a half later, I'm back at work, back in the gym lifting weights, doing handstand pushups and everything else I did before my heart attack.  I'm 40 pounds lighter, not nearly as strong as I was before, but I'm a hell of a lot healthier.  And I am grateful, every single day, to see the sun rise and set, to be there for my wife and daughter, and everyone and anyone else that I have the great good fortune to encounter every single day of my new life.

    All the best,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 29.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 12:31
    I appreciate Ira's kind words, apologize for my typo's, and should have mentioned that more details on my program are discussed in my  book "One Heart-Two Lives: Managing Your Rehabilitation Program WELL," where I have included chapters "Caregivers" and "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and Heart Problems."

    Hope this is helpful.

    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    (805) 698-4651
    ------------------------------



  • 30.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 13:35
    ​Nice looking book, Brent!  It's available on Amazon, too, and I'm about to purchase it.  I recommend that Mended Hearts compile a library of the books written by its members which, to my knowledge now includes Brent's book and Bob and Adele Levin's "I'll Keep You Alive."  And I recommend others do the same. 

    And both books were written by lawyers, while I'm a lawyer myself---hmmm, but I promise they didn't put me up to this.  Well, I don't write these types of very informative and moving memoir/self-help books, but I do write poetry and I do hope to soon join these august authors with some poems dealing with my own post heart attack/surgery/near death experience and resurrection to joyous existence. 

    Best to all,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 31.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!
    Best Answer

    Posted 03-29-2017 11:36
    This is long!!  
    Hi, my name is Helen and I'm 67 years old.   I'm very much looking forward to my 68th birthday in October. :)  In 2011, I had a major heart attack that consisted of a 100% blockage in my right coronary artery.  I had a stent implanted and my cardiologist said if I'd of been just a few seconds later, he wouldn't have been talking to me.  I was that close to not making it.  During the next three years, I ended up with three more stents.  During Thanksgiving, 2014, I was in the hospital for bypass surgery.  Although it was a single bypass, my surgeon said he had to perform the surgery because it was my right coronary artery and that's the one that fed the blood to the rest of my body.  During the surgery, my veins started collapsing and the one he wanted to use peeled apart like an onion.  My surgeon finally found one but it was too short and had to be pieced together but it worked.  I nearly died three times and had to stay on the ventilator much longer than they anticipated because my lungs would not work on their own.  My surgeon said I nearly bled out twice.  After the surgery, I went into AFIB and it took several hours to get me past that.  As if that wasn't enough for my doctors to contend with, my BP dropped critically low and my blood sugar spiked out of control.  I ended up in the hospital for 18 days.  They must have pulled off a miracle because they told my children that it would take a miracle for me to come through it.  As you can tell, I'm still here!

    I also have Peripheral Vascular Disease, COPD, Emphysema, Sleep Apnea, am on oxygen and CPAP.  And, as if someone didn't think that was enough, I was also "blessed" with cervical and uterine cancer (of which I've had three procedures and two surgeries for.  Let's don't forget the last surgery that had to be done because of hemorrhaging from the previous surgery. 

    So..... what do I do all day, with all of this going on?  I defy the odds!!  I do, pretty much, what I want to do.  Yard work, watch my grandbabies, a LOT of crafting and worry my children by telling them I'm going to do what I know I can do!  I know my limits and I do listen to my doctors.... BUT I've, finally, convinced my doctors that they aren't going to hold me down.  My doctors just stare at me and shake their heads, wondering how I keep going.  It's determination and perseverance, friends, that's how I keep going.  Hey, I can STILL out do my children AND grandchildren!!  :) 

    I'm currently working  towards being a VISITOR for our Mended Hearts chapter in Greenville, NC.

    ------------------------------
    Helen Donahue chpt 023
    Ayden NC
    silverrose@suddenlink.net
    ------------------------------



  • 32.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-30-2017 00:33
    I AM READING ALL THE FORUMS ABOUT YOUR SURGERY'S AND I THINK I WILL LIST MINE ALSO.
    18 STENTS
    2 OPEN HEARTS.
    PACEMAKER
    3 RD STAGE KIDNEY FAILURE
    2 ANEURYSUMS--  1  IN LEFT LEG  1 ACENDING AOTORTA
    MY HEART IS CALCIFING MOST OF THE NATURAL VEINS AND AUTRIES ARE BLOCKED
    LUNGS FULL OF MAC.  SIMULIAR TO TUBERCLOUIS.... BUT NOT THE SAME  NOT CATCHING
    2 TIA,S
    SKIN CANCER
    I DO NOT KNOW HOW MANY HEART ATTACKS.  I IGNORE THEM.  THEY GO AWAY
    ..
    I NOW CALL THE NURSES IN THE HOSPITAL BY THEIR FIRST NAME AND THEY ASK WHAT ROOM I WANT.
    I USUALLY BRING MY OWN FOOD.  THEIRS IS NASTY.
    I REFUSE TO USE ON OF THOSE BEDS THAT GROAN AND MOVE..  I ALSO TURN OFF THE BEEPING MACHINE OR PUT IT ON SILENT.
    I STILL DO WHAT I WANT BUT AM SLOWING DOWN SOME., BUT REMEMBER ATTITUDE IS THE SECRET.  KEEP AN ATTITUDE AND EDUCATE YOURSELF ABOUT YOUR CONDITION.  IF YOU DO NOT KNOW THE QUESTIONS,  YOU WILL NOT GET THE CORRECT ANCWERS.




    ------------------------------
    Buddy Isaacson
    Pasadena TX
    (713) 477-2796
    ------------------------------



  • 33.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-02-2017 10:16
    Hi, I am a member of chapter 11 in Louisville, KY and an accredited hospital visitor.  I had my open heart surgery and a mechanical aortic valve implanted in 1967 at the age of 31.  I just turned 81 and have the original Starr-Edwards "ball-in-cage" valve that continues to function normally.  Although age is slowing me down a little I still enjoy a normal life and lifestyle (family, golf, gym, fishing etc).

    ------------------------------
    Richard Feusner
    Louisville KY
    (502) 239-6811
    ------------------------------



  • 34.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-17-2017 17:48
    Hi all!  
    I'm a grandma (Nona) of an amazing little heart warrior named Lucas.  He was born Christmas 2014 & was sent home shortly after birth undiagnosed.  Thanks to my daughter-in-law knowing something was wrong (mother's intuition at it's finest) he was readmitted & a pulse ox reading raised the flag that got him transferred to AI DuPont Children's Hospital where he was diagnosed with 7 CHDs.  He has TGA-d, Tricuspid Atresia, HRHS, Interrupted Aortic Arch, SVT, VSD & Wolff Parkinson-White Syndrome.  Non-cardiac he has GERD & late dumping syndrome. He had the Norwood & Upper Glenn and we're waiting on the Fontan, probably next year--he also had the Nissen Fundoplication & is on bolus feeds via feeding tube.  
    Learning what I have in the past 2-1/2 years & looking back, all the signs were there and were missed.  I never dreamed I'd be advocating so hard for something I never even heard of until his diagnosis but can't imagine doing anything else.  I just accepted a position as CHD Awareness Coordinator for the Mended Little Hearts of the Delaware Valley and am very excited to promote this cause--I have the sweetest little 27 lb inspiration & I hope I do my heart warrior proud.

    I have a very active Facebook Community page that educates/advocates CHD Awareness.  I started a Heart Smart series in January 2015 covering one CHD a week--I have about 6 months to go to finish this massive project; that series posts weekly there & can be found in it's entirety on my Pinterest page.  I also run contests to advocate things like pulse ox screening and donate baby blankets (that were inspired by Lucas) and boo-boo bunnies to local area CICUs for our little heart warriors spending the holidays there.  If anyone is on Facebook & would like to check it out, here's the link:  https://www.facebook.com/nonasarcCHDaware
    Facebook remove preview
    View this on Facebook >
    https://www.facebook.com/nonasarcCHDaware








    ------------------------------
    Billy Werner (Nona)
    ------------------------------



  • 35.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-08-2018 13:47
    Hello to everyone here.  Frederick Gregory reporting in from League City, TX.  Like a lot of people, I have a weak heart due to two heart attacks and at least one AFib.  My first heart attack occurred in 2001.  I went to the emergency room, not because of my heart but because I was having the onset of pneumonia.  I was told by the doctors there that some of my symptoms that I was experiencing were very heart attack like.  After a number of test over the next few weeks nothing proving this was found.

    Last Feb. 2016 happened to mark the third anniversary of my wife's passing.  Shortly after this, I had a full fled heart attack.  This was looked into by different doctors as I'm now in a different state.  My test showed that I have <g class="gr_ gr_1697 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar multiReplace" id="1697" data-gr-id="1697">scarring</g> from a past heart attack as well as a leaking aortic valve per my new cardiologist.

    As can be expected I am well medicated now taking about a dozen pills per morning for my heart and other reasons such as seizures.  The cardiologist referred me to a heart surgeon who refused to operate on me for two reasons.  The main reason he refused to perform a valve replacement operation was due to not enough test actually showing that I have a leaking valve.  The fact that my heart is too weak for the surgery was his second reason to say no to helping me out.

    To make things more complicated for myself I experienced an AFib even just after hurricane Harvey went over us.  So my heart is not in good shape and my insurance is not stepping up to bat to help me.  So far they have refused to allow me to wear a LifeVest or any sort of external defibrillator.  Per my cardiologist, the only now available option is for me to have a pacemaker.  

    Unfortunately, the process of getting a pacemaker is not going anywhere.  As I have a dangerously low pulse rate the cardiologist ask me to keep track of it through the month of December to help him decide if a pacemaker would be the magic answer for me.  So by the end of December, I go back to see him to finally get an answer to my problems.  All I get from him is his usual time he spent reviewing my medical records and asking to see me again in one month.

    As I am not getting anywhere with this old man who is understaffed and sees too many patients, I am in search of other options.  For starts, I need to see my MD to discuss all of this as she is the one that saved my life but sending me to the hospital while I was having the AFib.

    Like one million other things I wait for <g class="gr_ gr_4099 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar only-ins doubleReplace replaceWithoutSep" id="4099" data-gr-id="4099">answer</g> to this.


    ------------------------------
    Frederick Gregory
    League City TX
    2819672078
    ------------------------------



  • 36.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-09-2018 08:47
    Frederick,

    As my mother used to say "You have many examples that you have lived." My condolences about losing your wife and Hurricane Harvey, besides all the other "stuff" going on in your life. I hope you have a family or other support system that we typically call "care givers." 

    I am reminded of a friend who was going through a tough time. We lived in Kingwood, Texas, when she said "I guess that was a learning experience, but I am just not sure I can afford to learn much more," which I think summaries where you are with your physician. 

    My opinion is that you need to take charge of your medical situation, as I did while rehabilitating from a series of heart issues, which were discovered when I stopped breathing. For details on my approach, I direct you to my book "One Heart-Two Lives: Managing Your Rehabilitation program WELL" (Amazon). I wrote it with Mended Hearts members in mind.

    Brent Zepke





  • 37.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-09-2018 12:27
    Hi! My name is Terry Martin in Lexington, Ill which is just north of Bloomington/Normal.
    I had triple bypass surgery 13 years ago and been for stents 3 times. I was having problems with heart attack symptoms in the morning after walking dogs. High blood pressure, elevated pulse rate, sweats and weakness. I would sit and in a hour it would all go away and i could be as active as I wanted. this has been going on for some time. My cardiologist who I have had from the start wasn't concerned. He asked if I wanted to do a stress test. i did. We did a walking stress test and i passed with flying colors. Of course I couldn't take the metoprolol blood pressure medicine. I asked it this was what the problem was. I got no answer. I called his office and said I was cutting the dosage in half to 25 mg.. They said okay.It still not solve the problem. since this doctor is now affiliated with another hospital and the hospital I prefer is associated with another group he was no longer coming to my hospital. This gave me an opportunity to another doctor who was recommended by a friend. His answer was to take medicine at night. I told him the instructions said to take with food. He said nonsense. So I have been doing that and it has been 90% effective. He also did had be do a chemical stress test. All okay.
    My old cardiologist is just that - older. I think he is only working on emergency situations and not routine problems. 
    My wife also switched to the new doctor and he improved her situation and changed medicine for both of us saving about $1,000 per quarter. Sometimes you have to keep searching for a doctor who solves your problems. It would be nice of you could interview different doctors to see who works best with you. Not everyone likes the same doctor.
    Terry

    Virus-free. www.avast.com





  • 38.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-09-2018 16:21
    Frederick, from the description that you wrote I gather that your getting your medication from multiple doctors.I had a bad experience with that situation. I would suggest you take your medication list to a  pharmacist, preferably a hospital pharmacist. There's always a possibility of the meds not agreeing with one another. Bill

    ------------------------------
    Dr Bill
    Ryan. PhD.
    Elkton MD. USA
    443 485 6266[
    Mended Hearts Chapter 179. Past Pres.
    ------------------------------



  • 39.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-10-2018 18:49
    Dr. Bill,

    Currently, I am under the care of three doctors.  It is always possible that there is a medication issue.  I'm currently taken about one dozen pills for my heart and other reasons.  I'll contact my pharmacist in the morning to see if there is a problem.  As many times as I see a doctor and they change or adjust one or more of my meds, I always carry a list with me to make sure it is updated into their records.

    As of this afternoon, my MD is contacting my cardiologist to find out I should be <g class="gr_ gr_1158 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling multiReplace" id="1158" data-gr-id="1158">off</g> certain meds and why others were adjusted.

    ------------------------------
    Frederick Gregory
    League City TX
    2819672078
    ------------------------------



  • 40.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-12-2018 19:07
    Frederick, gratulation, you're doing the right thing at the right time. I have another suggestion despite the fact that online information is not always reliable I found the People's pharmacy to be very helpful. Find them at www.People's Pharmacy.com.
    it may be a cut-and-paste job

    Dr. Bill

    ------------------------------
    Dr Bill
    Ryan. PhD.
    Elkton MD. USA
    443 485 6266[
    Mended Hearts Chapter 179. Past Pres.
    ------------------------------



  • 41.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-13-2018 10:38
    I am Angela Manriquez, caregiver for Ron Manriquez. Welcome.:-)





  • 42.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-14-2018 09:22
    Hi.  I noticed the response from Dr. Bill Ryan was from Elkton MD.  I'm in Charlestown MD.  Are you affiliated with Union Hospital?


    From the desk of:
    Billy Werner and inspired by my heart warrior grandson Lucas

    CHD Awareness Coordinator for Mended Little Hearts of Delaware



    Creator/Admin of Nonas Arc














  • 43.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-19-2018 15:26
    Hello Billy Wemer, sorry to be so long with reply. Yes I am connected with Union Hospital but I am not a medical person,. I am a retired educator. After 30 some years of answering to students calling me Dr. Bill it sometimes confuses medical people. I'm a Dr. of philosophy, a PhD. If you look it up in the dictionary you'll find the definition of doctor is teacher. My 2nd career was teaching Cardiac Rehab to heart patients in New Jersey and was an 8 year Mended Hearts Pres. Of chapter 179. When we moved to Elkton I learned that Union Hospital is an excellent hospital but without a catheterization lab. I also discovered that the cardiology program is very thorough and I am a willing volunteer in that program. Dr. Bill.
     
     
     
     





  • 44.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-22-2018 09:38
    Hi Bill, thanks for getting back to me.  I continually hit a wall with Union in trying to spread CHD Awareness.  I've worked with Elaine Boyle and the list of referrals from her aren't receptive to any of the many campaigns I've run inclusive of Newborn Screening Awareness Cards from Babys First Test.  
    My grandson was born there in 2014 and was sent home undiagnosed with 7 CHDs.  He is living proof they lack in this area & I'm looking for any help I can get to help promote this cause.
    Let me know if you can help.  Thank you!


    From the desk of:
    Billy Werner and inspired by my heart warrior grandson Lucas

    CHD Awareness Coordinator for Mended Little Hearts of Delaware



    Creator/Admin of Nonas Arc














  • 45.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-19-2018 13:21

    Hi All.... 

    I'm Jennifer (33 yrs old from NY), I am almost 7 months post op (CABGx6). After 5 years of being misdiagnosed and struggling to breath I finally am starting to feel myself again. Sitting in the ER that night was the scariest thing in my life, I was alone and being told I had a heart attack, while words like "congestive heart failure" were being thrown around. This diagnosis still feels like it came out of left field, cause as far as we can tell is my Type 1 diabetes that I was diagnosed with 20 years ago. 
    Had a few complications after surgery, was kept under sedation for 10 days and kept in the hospital for 23 all together. 

    I know I can't be the only person my age who has dealt with this, but I feel completely alone. 



    ------------------------------
    Jennifer Marsh
    Clifton Park NY
    ------------------------------



  • 46.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-20-2018 10:51
    Jennifer,

    First congrats for obtaining the necessary medical assistance. You are not alone in your experience of no warning: during a stress test my heart stopped. Like you, I had surgery (quintuple bypass) followed by months of complications. My days were filled with physical challenges: my nights by emotional ones.

    I suspect you are where I was: will a particular movement help or hurt me? 

    I realized in order to progress from rehab-to-recovery, I needed to use my training.  As an attorney, professor of management, and author, I had created improvement plans for thousands: it was time to develop one for myself. It worked so well that I decided to share it through my book "One Heart-Two Lives: Managing Your Rehabilitation Program WELL."  Read www.onehearttwolivescom.wordpress.com for a discussion.

    Ten year later, I just returned from skiing, am leaving today for two weeks in France and then flying cross country to visit family. 

    Good luck: you are not alone. 

    Brent Zepke







  • 47.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-22-2018 08:32
    Hi Jennifer, This is my 1st response to a post as I am new to the site. I am from Syracuse, NY, part of why I am responding. I am a bit older than you, but at only 56, I too feel I am too young for all my heart related issues. For me, the aloneness is one small element of the plethora of issuses realted to some of us w/heart issues. I won't drag this out. If you are interested in communication and support? Please let me know? If and when, until the? Be well.
    Sincerely,
    Randy Schryver

    ------------------------------
    RANDY SCHRYVER
    SSI
    N/A
    SYRACUSE NY
    ------------------------------



  • 48.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-22-2018 12:49
    Hello Jennifer and Randy,
    I want advise you both to Google "Mended Hearts near me". A map of the US pops up and click on NY state. You will find the existing chapters near you. I can tell you the depression is normal for what we go through. I do not care if you only have a single stint or a full blown transplant, it is normal. This forum is also a place to talk to others besides meeting with folks in person. Cardiac rehab allows you to meet with others like yourself and make contacts to talk to. You will note we have Mended Little Hearts chapters as well. There are a lot of children with heart issues as well. I figure if they can cope with it so can I.
    Please use this forum as often as you need to get answers to questions or look for help. 
    Some of what we all have to deal with is Genetic. We are stuck with that and just have to adjust. But the rest we can change and deal with. One of the things that I have seen help others with depression is finding a reason to get better. Weather it is a Grandchild, Job, Hobby or what ever give you some sense of joy. Find one thing that you can smile about and after that other things will start to get easier and you begin to see other things that bring you joy.
    Please remember you are not alone and we all have a stake in assisting each other. 
    You both have helped me by sharing yourselves and what you have gone through. If you don't have a chapter near you, contact the nearest chapter to get assistance to start your own. If that is not practical just start emailing with the folks of the chapter near you to find resources in your area to assist. By getting involved you will find your depression will become easier to deal with. I have seen it in others and I know it can help.
    You two are tough and strong, you proved that by getting on this site and talking about yourself. Don't forget that.
    Looking forward to hearing from you again.

    Richard Short
    Chapter 395
    Apple Valley, CA
    Certified Visitor.

    On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 5:32 AM, RANDY SCHRYVER via Mended Hearts






  • 49.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-23-2018 14:56
    You can get through this.  You're strong to have come this far.  And cardiac rehab will help.  Both the staff and the patients are wonderful resources and will become your friends. I've told them they didn't save my life, but they gave me my life back.  I was poet-in-residence at a middle school when my heart stopped.  It was idiopathic asymptomatic cardiomyopathy; in other words, I died twice with no rhyme or reason for it.  But I do think I'm here for a reason and part of it is to give back and help others.  I never got depressed.  I was unconscious for nine days and given no chance to survive, and my EF was 10, so I was just glad to be here, but there are struggles.  Just remember:  it does get better.  Good luck and God Bless.   Francee

    ------------------------------
    Francee Levin
    Columbia SC
    (803) 788-1207
    ------------------------------



  • 50.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-24-2018 15:07
     
    William J. Ryan PhD. AKA Dr. Bill.
    drbillryan86@alum.rpi.edu
    www.heartsofjersey.org





  • 51.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-08-2018 15:17
    Hi. I'm Tom and I had my aortic valve and part of my ascending aorta replaced 11 weeks ago today. Two weeks later I went back in with Afib and had to be cardioverted, which worked out great. Have been doing fine until a few days ago when I started having lots of anxiety about it and kind need to know I'm not crazy.

    ------------------------------
    Tom Hoover
    Akron OH
    ------------------------------



  • 52.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-09-2018 05:48
    Tom, 
    I'm a heart patient who as survived two aortic aneurysm repairs.  The first was the repair of a ascending aortic aneurysm in July 2007 and the second was aortic arch aneurysm procedure in May 2017.  In both cases, I participated in a Phase II cardiac rehab program about six weeks after both surgeries. The Cardiac Rehab is a exercise program supervised by cardiac nurses and physical therapy specialists to help your body return to full health and endurance after surgery. 

    The program consists of three visits per week for one hour for 36 sessions. The exercise program includes Treadmills, Stationary Bikes, Arc Trainers, Rowing and Ergonomic machines. If you have not completed this program, ask your cardiologist for a script to participate.  If you have completed cardiac rehab, speak to the head nurse about a Phase III maintenance program at a local YMCA or facility.
    Good luck,
    Regards,
    Vic 

    Mended Hearts of Morris County, President
    Morristown Medical Center
    Morristown, New Jersey





  • 53.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-09-2018 12:17
    Tom,
    Vic is right about Cardiac Rehab. Seek it out and tell your doctor you want to be referred to the program. It helps with the depression and fear as well. Seeing all the other folks going to rehab let me know I was not alone. I had a Quad bypass in 2015 and a pacemaker in 2017. Rehab helps with all parts of healing, not just the physical. Hang in there, it will get easier to deal with as you heal.

    Take care,

    Richard





  • 54.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-25-2018 09:29
    Hi Tom, I completely understand the anxiety issue surround heart issues. I was suppose to go in for an ablation procedure on May 30th. Prelim CAT scan shows a big fat new Aortic Anyeurism! This is AFTER #4 MI's, stents, 3x bypass and a bypass failure. Leading to Afib AND Aflutter​! I am an anxious, nervous wreck right now. I was progressing well in cardio rehab, feeling better. Now? I am scared to walk home with a bag of groceries...My consult isn't until the 29th. Trying to find support groups in my area, they don't seem to exist. Hence. here I am. I know its easier said than done. But, I try to stay busy and occupy my tome so I am not so alone with my thoughts. Dangerous place for me...Internet, chat, phone calls, Facebook, TV, music< Hanging w/family or friends. Theres no magic cure, we just have to go thru it and pray we survive? ME? I feel like the cat w/9 lives, feeling like hes already used up 8 of them...Pleas be well.

    Sincerely,
    Randy

    ------------------------------
    RANDY SCHRYVER
    SSI
    N/A
    SYRACUSE NY
    ------------------------------



  • 55.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-28-2018 18:41
    Hi everyone my name is Vince. I am 50 years old and I live in central Florida. Last year I was diagnosed with CHF; Aortic valve stenosis, Bradycardia and cardiomyopathy. I now have a new Aortic valve-tissue and an ICD. I am looking forward to participating in this group. The posts that are shared really help me learn and understand things. When I was in the hospital I remember a man from Mended Hearts visiting me in my room, I am glad there is a site on the computer because I live 90 minutes away from  Orlando

    ------------------------------
    vincent mahar
    -
    -
    Avonpark FL
    ------------------------------



  • 56.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-29-2018 12:06
    Good day to all! I am Gilbert and, by the grace of God, I am a heart attack survivor. September 8, 2014, I was working out at local YMCA when my heart attack occurred. I passed out on a weight training machine and stopped breathing.

    I’m grateful that my event occurred in a place where there were a number of trained people on hand. Some Y staff members sprang to action and work hard to revive me, eventually requiring a defibrillator.

    Then I was rushed to a hospital. While en route, I once again stopped breathing and had to be “zapped”. On September 11, I had quadruple bypass surgery.

    I have recovered well. I have continued to be dedicated to exercise, mostly walking. I try to eat more healthy, and have dropped a few pounds. I retired from the corporate world in 2015, and am enjoying spending time with family, house and yard projects, and volunteer work.



    Sent from my iPad




  • 57.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-08-2018 23:51
    HI, I'm Jeff and had open heart surgery (triple bypass, mitral value replacement, and surgical ablation) 12 weeks ago, on March 19, 2018.

    Being in the hospital and being told I needed open heart surgery took me totally by surprise. I'm was a healthy 63 year old who had never been sick, and had no symptoms to indicate heart disease. My parents however both passed away from heart disease, so there is the connection.

    Being fairly young and healthy before surgery has helped me in my recovery, but I received another shock 6 weeks after surgery that I also had Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD). This has turned out to be more a stumbling block in my return to normal than anything else.

    I don't know what my future holds but I am trying to be optimistic. Learning to live with PAD is definitely a challenge.

    I live alone and find it comforting to have this forum. I don't feel so alone when I visit here.

    ------------------------------
    Jeff Novak
    San Antonio TX
    ------------------------------



  • 58.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-09-2018 22:15
    Hello Jeff,

    I had a triple bypass in 1989, then in 2006 I had a mild heart attack and a stroke after having a stint placed in the most blocked of two blocked vessels. Since then, I continue to be active in my daily routines. However, in February 2017 I was diagnosed with an Aortic Aneurysm. My doctor chose not to have surgery, but to watch it for changes (I was 88 yrs young at the time).

    This year, 2018 during my annual check-up, the aneurysm had not changed in size, so I continue to live my life without worrying about the future. 

    We have a man in our Mended Hearts Chapter who has been living with a similar Aortic problem for the past six years without problems. Both of us decided to follow our doctor's instructions knowing that some day surgery may be required.

    I hope this information gives you some comfort with your concerns. 

    Yours with a heart condition,
    BOB WILKE

    ------------------------------
    Robert (Bob) Wilke
    Goleta CA
    (805) 968-0583
    ------------------------------



  • 59.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-10-2018 21:10
       I am called Larry; and had by-pass surgery in 2002..
    I have enjoyed being a Mended Hearts Visitor in Oakland, California
     and recommend the experience
    both as a visitor and being visited

    Larry Perry
    larryper@aol.com





  • 60.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-14-2018 19:24
    Thank you Bob for sharing your experiences. You are an inspiration to me. So your first bypass lasted 17 years before your heart attack in 2006? Do you know what caused you to have a heart attack? Was it the stent placement? Do you take medications (blood thinner, statin, etc.)? Sorry for all the questions but these are things that I have wondered about - how long my bypass and valve replacement will last, will my medications (blood thinner, statin, high blood pressure med) protect me from clots, blockages, and another heart attack.

    I have never been a worrier, but I don't understand why I am not feeling better after 3 bypasses and a valve replacement. Seems my blood flow should now be greatly improved and I would feel the benefits. I felt much better before surgery than I do now. And I am concerned of the coincidence of the peripheral artery disease (PAD) suddenly causing me so many problems after surgery.

    I find it difficult to find that sweet spot of pushing myself physically to regain strength, stamina, and endurance - and not injuring myself - which I think I have innocently done like 3 times already. I also never had a problem sleeping and now, after my surgery, wake up every hour, never feeling like I've had a good night's sleep.

    Thanks to everyone for allowing me to vent. I am more optimistic than this may sound but do have concerns.

    ------------------------------
    Jeff Novak
    San Antonio TX
    ------------------------------



  • 61.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-10-2018 09:09
    Hello Jeff and Robert,
                                        Many similarites we three share. I am waiting on test results-  What to do with a 5.4 cm anyeurism (Aortic)? Will find out on Tues. I guess?...#3 stents, #4 MI's & 3X by-pass. I am 56, and the thought of being cut, sawn and stitched, AGAIN! Is a bit daunting for me. Especially mentally and emotionally​ let alone all the extreme physical changes we ALL go through with our issues. It helps to communicate with others like ourselves. "We", are the only ones who honestly, literallly know what we go through. I wish the area I live in had live support groups, Cardio-related issues. Can not seem to find one? Good Luck to you fellas. Imagine I will write more after my next Dr. visit on Tuesday...


    Please take care,


    Randy Schryver

    ------------------------------
    RANDY SCHRYVER
    SSI
    N/A
    SYRACUSE NY
    ------------------------------



  • 62.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-14-2018 18:52
    Dear Randy,

    A burden shared is only half as heavy. I'm glad you shared your upcoming diagnosis regarding your aneurysm and the daunting treatment/repair that may be necessary. I find myself sharing your concern even though we have never met or know each other. Since my own open heart surgery I find my empathy has increased dramatically. Please keep us posted.

    In my thoughts,

    ------------------------------
    Jeff Novak
    San Antonio TX
    ------------------------------



  • 63.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-11-2018 10:16
    Hello Jeff 
    All of what we go through makes us a family of our own. We all know the feeling of seeing the hospital lights above our heads and the like warm coffee or tea. That bad mattress and never really getting a good night's sleep. If any questions or concerns creep into your thoughts and your medical professionals can't help relieve the stress just use this venue for help. It may not be the quickest way to get an answer but at least it is from someone who knows what you are feeling. 
    Take care of yourself, 

    Richard Short 



    Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.





  • 64.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-15-2018 16:25
    Hi Jeff, I had a valve replaced and an ICD installed in the spring of 2017   It took about a year for me to feel close to where I was before these two surgeries . Exercise and diet helped a lot. I felt very tired at first like I could sleep for more than 12 hours everyday. I was in the hospital with HF before the valve replacement and lost over 60 pounds and most of my strength in 1 week, I lost it quick but regaining it took me about a year

    ------------------------------
    vincent mahar
    -
    -
    Avonpark FL
    ------------------------------



  • 65.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-16-2018 12:22
    Hi Vincent,

    Thanks so much for sharing your experience. I guess I need to learn to be more patient. I expected my 3 bypasses and valve replacement to make me feel really good. Not happening ... yet. I'll keep up with my physical activity, as much as my PAD will allow, and choose to believe my energy and weight will increase in time. I can't tell you how good it is to hear about what others have gone through on the road to a new normal.

    I have a job interview on Tuesday and really have mixed feelings about returning to work. It's a management job and I'm not sure I have the strength to work an eight hour day, but I need the health insurance. My COBRA insurance just went up to $800 a month and is quickly draining my savings. I just don't know what to do if I'm offered the job. I get worn out just doing house and yard work.

    I very much appreciate you taking the time to communicate with me.





  • 66.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-16-2018 17:53
    Your recovery may be quicker, one thing I have learned is we  are all different even though we have a lot of the same issues. You may want to plan on how you spend your energy at first until you build up your stamina .  I learned that for me some days I would feel very good and I would do too much and pay for it the next day. I learned to plan and pace myself. I continue to make progress but sometimes I get impatient.

    ------------------------------
    vincent mahar
    -
    -
    Avonpark FL
    ------------------------------



  • 67.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-18-2018 10:58
    Sounds so much like me. Type A personality. Its hot here so Im taking my time planning for the next week because of the problems with heart patients and very hot weather.  We adjust and we have great options as long as we r flexible. 
    thx for reminding me about patience!!!!!





  • 68.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-20-2018 10:26
    Hello Jeff, 
    I returned to work 8 weeks after my quad bypass. It was a process the first couple of days. But I found the routine of a work schedule helped me recover sooner. I had to be patient with myself and scheduled breaks for myself. I took a 10 minute walk every morning as well. I noticed that each week it became a little bit easier. I had to take a nap when I got home the first couple of weeks. Just listen to your body and it should be fine. Good luck.

    Richard Short 



    Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.





  • 69.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-22-2018 12:55
    Jeff, Sorry to be a bit late to the discussion. I remember when I was first released from incarceration at the heart center that I tried hard to get back to my normal routine and pushed hard. Found out quickly that was the wrong approach and suffered the consequences by actually taking backward steps. As it is I have difficulty walking forward so tripped. It's hard to go from jet setter to setter, but "a man's got to learn his limitations."

    A good Cardiac Rehabilitation program can teach you what the best exercises are for your specific needs and help you move forward. That not being feasible, you can also find an indoor track and walk daily, just be sure to take a buddy for safety, and remember the old adage no pain no gain is just not true for us, so don't push.

    We all recover at our own rate. Differences in our condition, overall health, age and so on all  affect how well we do. Have some patience you'll get there. This is a new adventure for you and you are doing great, takes time.

    Hope the job interview went well and it works out for you.

    ------------------------------
    Warren
    TucsonAZ
    ------------------------------



  • 70.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-23-2018 06:58
    "Incarceration "!! I bet you were a model patient, too....

    ------------------------------
    Donald Striegel
    Indianapolis IN
    (317) 786-8066
    ------------------------------



  • 71.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-22-2018 14:08
      |   view attached
    3 months cabg x2 doing well. Worked on setting up Phathom Firework tent last night. Took us 4 & 1/2 hours. 





  • 72.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-27-2018 00:36
    Hello all,
    I am Paul Benoit. I had a 5xCABG on May 24, 2018. I don't have any problem walking (I can walk more than a mile). But I am dealing with the sadness, depression <g class="gr_ gr_332 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="332" data-gr-id="332">and</g> sleeplessness...not to mention the discomfort in my chest. It's going on five weeks now and I thought I'd feel a lot better by now. Any thoughts?

    ------------------------------
    Paul Benoit
    ------------------------------



  • 73.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-27-2018 11:07
    Hello Paul,

    What you are going through is normal. I went into depression as well after my bypass. While you are healing there will be ups and downs. It will get better along with the discomfort in the chest area. Everyone heals at a different rate. Do not let it get you down. 
    While going to cardiac rehab and talking to several other folks recovering from any and all kinds of heart issues I found this out first hand. Some folks have pain and irritation at the scar area for over a year or more while others feel better in just 3 to 5 months. 
    This information may or may not make you feel better, but it is a fact. It took me a year to be able to sleep on my chest again. The Sternum has less blood flow due to its make up and as a result heals slower the other boney areas of the body. Also with less fat and muscle to support this area while healing. 
    After a few months my doctor allowed me to become more active and I became more active the better my mind set became. I wa able to return to do the things I did before my surgery. Every few weeks I was able to do more and more ad as a result my mind set became better. 
    I can assure you it does get better, just hang in there and talk to others going through the recovery process and you will feel the same. Take care

    Richard Short  





  • 74.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-27-2018 12:04
    Dear Paul,

    Be encouraged, you will feel a little bit better every week. I felt just like you do after my 5th week following open heart surgery .. sad, sleepless, and so limited in what I could do. I wonder why, after a triple bypass, valve replacement, and ablation for my afib, I didn't feel better. Seemed to me my blood should be flowing through my body better than ever. I've learned from reading the experiences of my second family (here on Mended Hearts) that recovery demands patience to be successful. That's been hard for me. I live alone and was also diagnosed with Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) so I knew I had to remain mentally strong to care for myself and meet the challenges ahead of me.

    I am now at my 13th week and feel remarkably better than at week 5. I am even starting a new job next week. It's a daunting feeling but I am ready for the challenge. At 63 I never expected to be experiencing all these new things - recovering from an invasive surgery and starting a new job. I think in order not to slip too deeply into sadness it helped me to just believe - believe you will slowly begin to feel better and find a new normal. Follow your doctor's instructions, be diligent with your medications, ask lots of questions at your follow-up appointments (I wrote mine down so I wouldn't forget), and slowly find the right balance for you between rest (highly important) and activity. Most of all, be patient.

    I'm confident you will move forward in your recovery. Please keep us posted on how you're doing. This is a great 24/7 place to vent or just share with others who understand.

    ------------------------------
    Jeff Novak
    San Antonio TX
    ------------------------------



  • 75.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-28-2018 10:59
    ​Hi Paul,

    It's going to take time.  I had sternum discomfort for some time after 5 weeks post-surgery, especially when I coughed or sneezed.  After another few weeks, though, the discomfort basically disappeared, sort of all at once.  I'm now closing in on 20 weeks post-surgery and just feel a little itching by the scar maybe two or three times a week for a few minutes.  I still feel numbness around the sternum and on the left breast area where they took a mammary artery, but it doesn't really bother me at all.

    I didn't ever feel depressed.  I just felt lucky to be alive, even after being intubated and unconscious for two weeks post-surgery and surviving pneumonia (I understand that my survival odds were fifty/fifty.  My surgery was on an emergency basis after a supposedly mild heart attack, where I had previously been symptom free, active and athletic for an old guy.  I feel fortunate that I had the mild heart attack because, if that hadn't happened, I'd probably keeled over one day at the gym or at work and be dead now.  Instead, I'm back at work, feeling well (although still not 100%), watching my daughter go off to college and enjoying every minute of every day of this borrowed time in which I'm living.

    Hang in there, brother.  It will get better.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    New York NY
    ------------------------------



  • 76.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-29-2018 11:39
    Post operative depression is not unusual. I suffered with it for about a month after discharge. It went away and all is very, very well.

    Al




  • 77.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 06-27-2018 18:31
    Hello Everyone, I am Rick Whitney from Temple, Texas. I was born with an extra muscle in the bottom of my heart. When I was six years old, I went to The City of Hope in California for an evaluation. They said eventually I would have to have surgery, but they weren't able to operate at that time. They said I would probably live to my early 20's. By the way, I am 64 right now!
    In August of 1998 I had it repaired at Scott & White Hospital in Temple.
    March 1997 I entered the hospital because I couldn't walk across the room without being out of breath. They were going to put in a Pacemaker/Defibrillator, but before they did, I coded in the ICU. The next day they put in the Pacemaker/Defibrillator.
    Two months later, I was on a Cruise to Alaska, when the out of breath symptoms returned. Two of the wires came disconnected.
    I went back to the hospital, and they replaced the wires.
    In September 1997 I had an Aortic Valve Replacement. That worked great, but the right side of my heart failed.
    January 3, 2018 I was admitted to the hospital to wait for a Heart Transplant. I waited until February 11, when I told the Doctors I had to go home for a couple of days, because I was going insane just waiting in the hospital. They agreed to let me go home for a couple of days.
    Later that afternoon I received a call from the Doctor telling me they had a heart for me. If I would have gone home, I would have missed out on a heart.
    I had the transplant February 12, 2018. My heart rejected the same day, so they put me in a coma for two weeks, to help my liver and kidneys.
    After that, everything went great.
    I got out of the hospital March 27, using a walker. About two weeks later, I went to using a cane.
    I started Cardiac Rehab in April, and now I am almost finished. I walk without my cane now. Cardiac Rehab is a great program.
    I am planning to join as a volunteer to do hospital visits. The Mended Hearts Group visited me every week in the Hospital, and that really helped me. I am now in a position to help others, and I look forward to the opportunity to help others.

    ------------------------------
    Dale (Rick) Whitney
    Temple TX
    ------------------------------



  • 78.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2018 10:39
    Hello everyone. I have never in my life posted anything to a message board. On May 25th 2018 I had the carpet ripped out from under me when I went to the ER with some difficulty breathing. I was told that my left main artery(the Widow Maker) was about 95% blocked. They did attempt to install a stint but it was unsuccessful so my surgeon told me I would need to have open heart surgery. I was floored! I'm 42 years old! I'm a husband and father to two children(ages 3 and 7) and all I could think of was the possibility of them growing up without there daddy.
    I had surgery the next morning and then woke up in ICU to begin my process of recovery. Staying in the hospital for a week was hard! Its the longest I've gone without seeing my kids. I didn't want them to see me with the drain tubes and IV and such hooked up. Especially my 3 year old. A day or two before I came home I did allow my daughter(the 7 year old) to come visit.
    Once I got home I feel like it got harder. I started to get really down. I started to get depressed. My doctors all told me that these were normal feelings and they would pass in time. It didn't make it any easier. I felt like a useless member of my family. A burden! I couldn't make a living for my family, I couldn't help around the house, and I couldn't be the rough-housing dad I had always been for my babies! I missed wrestling with them. I had to keep telling them to "be careful with daddy!"
    This Thursday will be 8 weeks since my surgery. For the most part I feel better physically. I still hurt most days, some are worse than others. Mostly soreness and stiffness. I went back to work on July 2nd. Mostly because sitting at home wasn't doing much for my mental health. The depression is better but not great. I keep looking forward to feeling "good" again. I suppose it will come in time!
    If you read this, thanks for reading my venting. I hope you or your loved one are doing well in there recovery.

    ------------------------------
    chris rhoads
    maintenance director
    land clearing specialists
    beaver PA
    ------------------------------



  • 79.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-17-2018 15:04
    Congratulations Chris, you must of been doing some searching and found the webpage for Mended Hearts. You've come to the right place and perhaps you didn't realize it but your now a member now of the Zipper Club. Your doctor was absolutely right, most of us have gone through the dark ages of depression and wondering "why me"?  There are not any easy answers. You might look in family history to learn if it is handed down from one generation to the next. I'm expect by now your doctors have talked to you about diet and eating habits. If your work takes you outside and on the go it might also include fast food for lunch, not a good idea. If you're a smoker,stop and if you are not but are surrounded by smokers keep away from them, secondhand smoke is just as bad.

    I don't imagine Beaver, PA has a chapter of Mended Hearts. This webpage will do some of the same things that happen in a MH Chapter meeting, sharing offering information. Your back to work and most likely did not go through the hospital Cardiac Rehab program. You might want a schedule and appointment with your cardiologist to go through some of the important concerns. He may suggest discussing your diet with a dietitian. You have a wonderful incentive to work on being a good healthy "heart patient" Your  wife and children need you. You're not alone. Proper exercise, right foods, paying attention you medications, all contribute. The end result is watching your children grow and enjoying the rest of your life.

    Just for the record my heart attack/triple bypass surgery took place in 2002 I was 71,a retired teacher and avid golfer, I'm still playing golf couple times a week and next November will celebrate my 87th birthday. My wife and I will drive to  Kentucky and celebrate with my granddaughters and the rest of the family. It's all about family and living to enjoy it.  Dr. Bill......

    ------------------------------
    Dr Bill
    Ryan. PhD.
    Elkton MD. USA
    443 485 6266[
    Mended Hearts Chapter 179. Past Pres.
    ------------------------------



  • 80.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-18-2018 08:13
    Bill,
     I want to thank you for your support and kind words. I hope that you have a wonderful time in November with your family! 
    Chris

    ------------------------------
    chris rhoads
    maintenance director
    land clearing specialists
    beaver PA
    ------------------------------



  • 81.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-18-2018 08:25
    Does anyone know what I can do if I want to volunteer at my hospital by offering advise/support to recent open heart patients? I would also like to consider starting a group meeting..possibly through Mended Hearts? I just have no idea where to start or whats involved. I just know that I would like to be there for people that have questions, fears or just need to talk. I didn't have that post surgery and I would have enjoyed it very much.

    ------------------------------
    chris rhoads
    maintenance director
    land clearing specialists
    beaver PA
    ------------------------------



  • 82.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-18-2018 11:13
    ​Hi Chris,

    I don't know the answer to your question, but I read that there is a visitor's program run by Mended Hearts and that they also provide training for visiting patients and their families.  I've been trying to get more information myself, as I very much would like to do this at Jersey City Medical Center, where I had my CABGx5 surgery.  I'm thinking of contacting my surgeon, who is head of surgery at the hospital, to see if he can open some doors for me.  Maybe your doc can help you as well.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 83.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-18-2018 18:39
    Hi guys, 

    you have indeed come to the right group.  I just attended my first national conference in San Antonio, and I have been blown away by the compassion and enthusiasm of the people in this fine organization.  I had open heart surgery in 2016 to replace my aortic valve and was visited by Mended Hearts.  Like you, I wanted to find a way to give back so I found Mended Hearts!  I am in the process of finishing my accreditation training and getting certified to visit heart patients in my local hospital.  You can find information about accredited visitor training on the website.  You can join the organization and you can find a local Mended Hearts chapter in your area.  It does wonders to share your story with others who understand what you have been through and you won't find a better group of folks - all so grateful for a second chance at life!  

    Good luck​ and let me know if I can assist further-- 

    be well, 
    Lea 
    Houston, TX

    ------------------------------
    Lea Parker
    ------------------------------



  • 84.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-19-2018 10:15
    ​Hi Lea,

    Thank you for responding.  I recently joined Mended Hearts Chapter 140 and have reached out about training/accreditation to become a Mended Hearts hospital visitor. I also have been trying to research the visitor program on the website, without much success, but if you are aware of where on the website it is located, I would love to know.


    I live in Hoboken, New Jersey and would be very interested in visiting patients at Jersey City Medical Center, which is where I had my CABGx5 surgery this past February. I don't know whether Mended Hearts has a relationship with JCMC, but my surgeon is chief of surgery there and I'm thinking that he might be able to open some doors for us if I approached him.

    Best regards,

    Ira



    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 85.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-20-2018 10:31
    Lee, your right. The Conference in San Antonio was terrific. Chris and all please go to  mendedhearts.org
     to locate a chapter near you. Welcome aboard


    ------------------------------
    Bill Voerster
    Assistant Regional Director
    Mended Hearts Inc
    Charlotte NC
    ------------------------------



  • 86.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-20-2018 19:25
    ​Between late January and late September 2011, I had two M.I.s, received seven stents (in three separate procedures), was coded twice, spent two-and-a-half days in a medically induced coma, had a cardio-conversion for afib, and open heart surgery (mitral valve repair and bypass), with uncontrollable bleeding. By Thanksgiving I was ready for cardio-rehab. My progress was steady -- and amazing. (Later, I had a defibrillator installed, as a precautionary measure.) I was so grateful I told my cardiologist and PTP that if they wanted anyone to talk to their patients who were facing heart surgery, I would be delighted to do so. Then I came across a MH newsletter in an examining room and thought, This is just what I want. (When I was interviewed and gave my history, I was told "You're a gold mine.") I've been visiting patients in Summit Hospital in Oakland since. I'm 76, fully active, and feeling good. I tell people, "I don't recommend it, but, boy, can you get a lot out of it." So, everybody, hang in there, and stay positive. We have no ultimate control over our outcomes but it is beyond what, at out low points, we can imagine.

    ------------------------------
    Robert Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.net
    ------------------------------



  • 87.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-28-2018 03:31
    Robert, I just had to respond, because we have the same last night.  I've had a defibrillator since I had cardiomyopathy in 2012.  I died twice, but I'm still here.  A five-year-old friend said, "I remember you.  You died but you got better."  I just came out of a week in the hospital with CHF, cardio inversion, new defibrillator and all kinds of other stuff.    And my thought for the day is we can't change the length of our lives, but we can alter the width and breadth.
    All the best,
    Francee Levin

    ------------------------------
    Francee Levin
    Columbia SC
    (803) 788-1207
    ------------------------------



  • 88.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-02-2018 22:29

    Well said.  God blesses you!

    Johnny Hunter






  • 89.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-20-2018 22:17
    Hey, folks. Learned about this organization from a nice guy who stopped by my CV-ICU hospital room. I'm now one month and a few days out from the surgery, so I thought I'd check in...

    Although I'm sure everyone's story is unique in some way, I'm guessing my story's a bit different from most. It started with a bad case of food poisoning that landed me in a small community hospital near my place in the Catskills region, upstate New York. Over the course of that first night there, frequent blood draws revealed a steady rise in my level of troponin, an indicator of heart trauma that is released into the bloodstream when heart cells die. An echocardiogram Monday morning confirmed that I had had a "small" heart attack during the night, which I hadn't even noticed. The docs theorized that the stress of the infection triggered this myocardial infarction. That afternoon, I was transferred by ambulance to a larger facility for a cardiac catheterization procedure. Afterward, they informed me that they had temporarily installed a balloon pump device - but that I had to have triple bypass surgery a.s.a.p.

    Had that surgery on the third morning of my hospitalizatoin. They "harvested" a vein from my left leg, an artery from my left arm, and another artery from inside my thoracic cavity for the three grafts. When they visited my room the following morning, the lead cardiothoracic surgeon reported that the procedure went very well from start to finish, and the lead cardiologist told me, unsolicited: "For what it's worth, I'm 90 percent sure that your blockages were caused by your radiation treatment all those years ago, not by diet or lifestyle choices."

    He was referring to the fact that I was diagnosed at the age of 25 with Hodgkin Lymphoma, and was treated with a half a year of chemo and two months of daily radiation treatments. Given that this was back in 1989, they used way more radiation than they needed to, and applied it in a much more generalized way. At the time, however, it was state-of-the-art care. But cancer treatment always comes with secondary effects. For me, they started about a dozen years after treatment, with more skin cancers in my radiation zone than I can count. My heart also started acting up in the early 2000s, and escalated to episodes of syncope (losing consciousness) before the docs finally figured out that the radiation had replaced my heart's electrical conduction system with scar tissue. That's why I'm now on my third pacemaker.

    So, the fact of another heart issue was not in itself surprising. What caught me off guard is that until now I haven't been given a diagnosis of problems with the actual functioning of my heart (although I've been complaining to my old cardiologist about symptoms for at least the last year and a half). My new cardiologist says he thinks my heart hasn't been getting enough oxygenated blood for at least four or five years. This isn't exactly the next chapter I'd hoped for...

    But they tell me recovery's on track, though the doc warned me that it will take months for me to regain my stamina, and may take as long as six months for me to "feel good again." At least the lead cardio surgeon who performed the operation told me "we fixed your heart" - which is a nice thing to hear. I think I'll hold him to it.

    So now I'm looking forward to my next check-up in a couple weeks -- when, I hope, the doc tells me I can go back to work, drive again, start cardiac rehab, and finally have a cocktail!

    -D

    ------------------------------
    Daniel Simmons
    ------------------------------



  • 90.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-02-2018 16:20
    Hello, 

    My name is Cassandra. Our 3rd son, Andrew, was born on 6/4/18 with TOF and diagnosed at 2 days old. He has been doing well, but recently started medication to help keep his oxygen saturation up to buy him more time until he needs surgery. At the end of August we will be scheduling surgery, likely for October. He will have his surgery at Children's Hospital in Milwaukee, WI. We are very anxious about this upcoming event, but are looking forward to it being over and having a healthy Andrew to grow and wrestle around with his 2 loving brothers! I'm happy to have found this group to join and discuss our concerns with others. 

    ~Cassandra

    ------------------------------
    Cassandra Glander
    Oshkosh WI
    ------------------------------



  • 91.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-07-2018 00:17

    Hello Everyone,

    My name is Christian Allen.  I am currently working on my Associates Degree in Emergency Medical Services with aspirations of becoming a Paramedic Firefighter.  I've decided to join Mended Hearts in order to serve my community, show support to individuals in this organization and those who have had cardiac events and to learn more about cardiac related knowledge.  I hope to gain many memorable experiences in Mended Hearts and Little Mended Hearts.  I'm very excited to meet such amazing people!



    ------------------------------
    CHRISTIAN J. ALLEN
    Pikes Peak Community College, '19
    christian.j.allen@outlook.com
    www.linkedin.com/in/kalikiano
    (808) 344-3374
    ------------------------------



  • 92.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-17-2018 11:07
    ​Hello Everyone,
    Joining this group is very new for me and the whole experience of even thinking about 'heart health' and support is very new. I am 48 years old and had a heart attack on May 31st, even as I type the words they still seem unreal and like something that happens to other people - not me. I am guessing that many of us feel that way. I think especially because of my age and that I feel young, having a heart attack was the furthest thing from my mind as I moved through my busy life. Thankfully I had no blockages but still left uncertain and more than a bit shaken as to why this happened but more importantly how to make sure it never does again. So, I am working extremely hard in cardiac rehab, taking my medication, trying to eat clean and also the impossible task of reducing stress -
    Thank you for welcoming me to the group and I look forward to learning from the other members and connecting with some of you on this crazy journey...
    Bridie

    ------------------------------
    Bridie O'Hagan
    Dumont NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 93.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-19-2018 11:32
    Welcome Bridie, Sounds like your 'warning bell' has motivated you to make some major life changes. Good for you! Stress is a real factor too in heart conditions so don't hesitate to seek support in obtaining info on stress reducing techniques. meditation, deep breathing, yoga, tai chi and a good therapist are all things to consider. Best wishes enjoying a long and healthy future.

    ------------------------------
    Patricia
    NC
    ------------------------------



  • 94.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-20-2018 09:49
    ​The "Why me?" feelings are pretty common, I imagine. But you have not been redefined by your "event." You will be back to your usual level of activities. You may even find the experience has benefited you in unexpected ways. Stay positive (and stay "lucky.")

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 95.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-20-2018 10:24
    Mended Hearts lost a great man and Director. Bob was a example for us all.





  • 96.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-12-2018 19:17
    Hi Im Katlyn im 26 and i was born with aortic stenosis. Im from new jersey and now live in Florida. Ive had surgeries in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey as well as here in Florida. First was a cath at six weeks old and several more after that. My last balloon cath was at 8 years old and that gave me ten years. At 18 i had my first open heart surgery to replace my aortic valve at the time there was alot going on at home so i dealt with it mostly on my own. Not the best outcome or circumstances but i still did it. I was under the impression that since my aortic valve was beyond damaged from so many caths that it couldn't be repaired. The surgeon went ahead and repaired it anyways come to find out he used a piece of my mitral valve to repaire the aortic valve. Not even a full year later i had an emergency surgery to replace the aortic valve this time it actually had gotten replaced with a bovine valve. Then the following year at 20 i had gone for my third open heart surgery to repair my mitral valve. After my third surgery i went into vtach upon discharge and needed to be kept for a few more days. After a while i was still having at least an episode a day so i had to have an icd put in. The doctors don't want me working so im still looking into volunteering somwhere. Id really like to help people who have been through or are going through things like this. I had a small type of stroke so i cant drive because im blind in my left eye. And at 23 i had to have my tubes tied because getting pregnant was not advised. While having these issues and complications can and have been a hindrance its only part of who i am and who we all are. They dont define me as a person. I do sometimes wish i could be healthy or at least know what its like to feel good but im not sure i will ever know exactly how that feels. Im always drained and tired and have pain but i push through it. Its made me stronger. I hope to connect to others dealing with similar.

    ------------------------------
    Katlyn Sloan
    FL
    ------------------------------



  • 97.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-14-2018 15:06
    ​Hi Katlyn,

    My name is Ira and, although the problems that I experienced are different then yours, I wanted to reach out to you anyway and share my experience and thoughts.  I am 68 years old and, about seven months ago I had what the doctors called a "mild" heart attack, leading to a cardiac catheterization which disclosed that I needed emergency quintuple coronary artery bypass surgery the very next day.  I had no coronary artery disease symptoms before the heart attack, and I had been pretty athletic my whole life, including up to the heart attack.  This was on February 12, 2018, and when I woke up after the surgery (which normally should have been on February 13 or 14), I was stunned to learn that February was ending (I believe I first became conscious that I was awake on February 28) and that I had been sedated and intubated for two weeks due to pneumonia and "c diff" complications.  I remained in ICU until March 5, and then was transferred to a rehab hospital where I remained until March 23.

    When I first got to rehab, I was so weak that I couldn't even sign my name.  I was incapable of walking or even standing without getting dizzy and nauseous, almost to the point of fainting.  The good people in rehab worked with me three hours a day and, by the time I was ready to go home, I had become a star patient that they let walk the floors for exercise, unaccompanied by nurses or physical therapists.  When I got home, I continued in outpatient rehab and worked at increasing my walking distance by one or two tenths of a mile each day.  I gradually was walking over two miles a day, something that seemed inconceivable to me just weeks earlier.  Finally, I was cleared to go back to a regular gym, lift weights again and continue my cardio conditioning.  I am now running between a mile and a mile and a half a day, and looking to improve on that.  I'm slow as molasses, but I am running.

    What I've learned from my experience is that nothing is impossible, no matter how bleak things look right now.  You're a lot younger than me and I hope that you will be able to overcome the lousy hand you've been dealt and transform your  life to one that is everything you want it to be.  I know that I'll be thinking of you and praying for you and here to talk if you want to talk.  Welcome to Mended Hearts and God bless you.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 98.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-26-2018 18:46
    Greetings,

    I'm Chris, 55 years old male from Mesa Arizona. Had double bypass 5 years ago, and have not had medical coverage, and our household income is too much according to the state, even though my wife earns just 16/hour. I finally got approval for VA care (ex-Navy), <g class="gr_ gr_532 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="532" data-gr-id="532">first</g> appointment is Dec 20th. I didn't think I qualified, but having to do something, I applied.

    So, needless to say, I have not been under the care I should. I had one treadmill test about 3 years ago, and recently a <g class="gr_ gr_370 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="370" data-gr-id="370">couple</g> episodes of discomfort that moved me to the ER but checked out normal. On Crestor, Bystolic <g class="gr_ gr_926 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="926" data-gr-id="926">and</g> aspirin.

    My main issue is with not knowing what to expect or how I should feel. The mental stress is daily. Constant fear of another attack. I needed to do something.

    Any insights would be greatly appreciated.

    Thank you!

    ------------------------------
    Chris Jackson
    ------------------------------



  • 99.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-27-2018 08:53
    Greetings Chris,
    I am John Sherrick living near Huntsville, Alabama and a survivor of two bypass surgeries. Why two surgeries? Because after the first one at age 50 I was the poster child for what NOT to do after bypass. I reverted to the days before my first bypass and started the old bad habits of smoking, eating what I felt like and not exercising. Being a retired Army officer I knew better. 
    At age 65 I had my second one. It has been 4 years since the second one and I still workout 3 times a week, stopped smoking, and lost over 35 lbs. Surprisingly I am no longer required to take Diabetes medicine anymore.
    Mood swings are normal for some and those little twinges may occur at times. 
    The best advice I can give is to keep exercising and live every day as your first. 
    Welcome to the "Green Side of the Planet"!


    ------------------------------
    John Sherrick
    Woodville AL
    (256) 728-8651
    ------------------------------



  • 100.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-27-2018 15:44
    Hello John,

    Thank you, <g class="gr_ gr_33 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="33" data-gr-id="33">sir</g> for the info.

    While I have not been exercising, I am active as best I can, and have lost about 20lbs. I guess I could drop another few pounds, but I was never "obese". I'm currently at 5'10" / 185 lbs. Being an athlete in my younger days, I'm still fairly decent shape relatively speaking. <g class="gr_ gr_340 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del" id="340" data-gr-id="340">Weight lifting</g> back then has helped. Once I'm under regular care, I can think about some kind of exercise. Regardless of my condition, it's not a bad thing. And yes, I've been a smoker since the age of 18 (enlisted at age 17). Isn't smoking and getting tattoos what <g class="gr_ gr_1904 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del" id="1904" data-gr-id="1904">sailers</g> do? I picked up the salty vocabulary, smoking, but never got the first tattoo or piercings. Being a combat flight simulator tech, I never set foot on a boat. I was what is called an "<g class="gr_ gr_4195 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling" id="4195" data-gr-id="4195">airdale</g>". After the Navy, I bounced around, lost, trying to find something, but never found it.

    Finally went to college back in 2004 and got a BA in Digital Animation/Multimedia to work in the game development industry, but that never panned out due to having to help with my grandparents for a few years. Virtually no game dev jobs in Arizona. I would have had to move to get work and at the time I just couldn't do that, so I stayed put, tried to work from home, but that is a really hard row to hoe. About four years after graduation I had the first heart attack. Finding work that I can do, and a company that will actually hire me hasn't been <g class="gr_ gr_7636 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del multiReplace" id="7636" data-gr-id="7636">sucessful</g>. One vehicle for both of us doesn't make it any easier. From what I understand so far, disability is likely not going to happen.

    I'm down to under a pack a day now and <g class="gr_ gr_851 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del multiReplace" id="851" data-gr-id="851">continuiing</g> to make the effort to stop. The added stress of it I want to keep to a minimum. I'll get there, slowly. I'm going to see about the patches from the VA.

    I've never had an issue with diabetes, high blood pressure or anything of the sort. My eating habits are not too bad, but the wife and I both do need to improve and are working on that. I'm the <g class="gr_ gr_1453 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del multiReplace" id="1453" data-gr-id="1453">classsic</g> meat eater, which I know it's said that's no good. I eat some veggies, but I'm sure not as much as some would like. Working on that as well.

    Mood swings I've had all my adult life. I've been treated for depression and anxiety, did the <g class="gr_ gr_2899 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del multiReplace" id="2899" data-gr-id="2899">couseling</g> thing several years ago, but the "system" as it was/is just didn't do it for me, especially with no insurance or cash to pay (dealing with it has caused me extended periods of unemployment many times). The drugs they tried never worked. The only thing I've found over the years that actually works is cannabis. I have to say that has been a <g class="gr_ gr_3287 gr-alert gr_spell gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim ContextualSpelling ins-del" id="3287" data-gr-id="3287">life saver</g>. My wife has seen the difference and knows I'm basically a monster without it. It truly is a miracle drug. I suspect the VA won't be fond of it, so we'll deal with it as we go along.

    The psychological aspects <g class="gr_ gr_4233 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar multiReplace" id="4233" data-gr-id="4233">is</g> what I struggle with. The <g class="gr_ gr_4293 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-del replaceWithoutSep" id="4293" data-gr-id="4293">fear,</g> and the not knowing which "little twinge" is serious makes each day...trying. Fortunately, my wife is a medical assistant who has worked in cardiology has been a big advantage. She does blood pressures and is pretty good at reading EKG readouts. She's scolded techs before on how to properly place EKG leads since she has taught how to do it with 12 leads. She's my hero!

    So, that's my story. We'll see what adventures await with the VA here in the Phoenix area, seeing here is the poster child of a badly run VA system. Lucky me! Since my mother passed away last month, we have no reason to stay here, so we are wanting to move back east to my wife's home area of Virginia in a <g class="gr_ gr_8302 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="8302" data-gr-id="8302">couple</g> years. Gonna have to really save the pennies for that.

    Again, thanks for the comments, sir.

    ------------------------------
    Chris Jackson
    ------------------------------



  • 101.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-28-2018 11:47

    Chris-

                  You've got yourself set up with a doctor. That's good. The two ER visits checked out okay. That's good.

                  Now, hopefully, you've got a doctor who knows what he's doing and can get a plan in place to suit your needs. (Your choice will be how well you adhere to it.) After that, it's somewhat out of your hands, but AMAZING recoveries can be made. (I feel mine is one, but I won't go into details.) My heart attacks (two in eight weeks, one major) left me frightened, depressed, with my entire sense of self in question. Eventually, I was telling people, "I don't recommend it, but you can get a lot out of it.) I feel my life has been transformed for the better.

    Bob Levin

     

    Sent from Mail for Windows 10

     






  • 102.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-28-2018 16:26
    <g class="gr_ gr_5 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="5" data-gr-id="5">Thanks</g> Bob for the comments.

    I do realize the mental aspects are, well, mental. That's an ongoing thing for me.

    As for a good doctor at the VA? Hmm, we'll see how that goes. Fortunately, my wife works at a large medical group so we have access to info and such without appointments. A quick question here and there passing in the hallways helps. My current primary care doc said yesterday to my wife patches for smoking are fine if I want to try them.

    Indeed, trying to do better can't hurt. I just need to get my mind right and try to stay focused on positive instead of the negatives. I admit my confidence has been lacking.

    If nothing else, I sure have gotten a lot of knowledge on cardiac care! I've always considered myself a lifelong student, so <g class="gr_ gr_876 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Grammar only-del replaceWithoutSep" id="876" data-gr-id="876">the education</g> continues.

    Thanks again!

    ------------------------------
    Chris Jackson
    ------------------------------



  • 103.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-29-2018 09:41
    Chris,
    I am the caregiver for my husband who had successful open heart surgery. And had a pacemaker defibrillator inserted due to being a in continuous AFIB. He had his moments of anxiety and feeling down. He was able to deal with them with the support of some wonderful doctors. His biggest help was joining MENDED hearts and then eventually becoming a patient visitor.
    That said both of us know the road to recovery is different for every person. In two of our local support groups we are beginning to discuss a book we found recommended to help with so many of the issues you are dealing with now. The author is Michael Hesser who had a quadruple bypass in 2015. The title is "A New and Better Now".. In the book he addresses the Challenges, Circumstances in your life now, and Positive steps to healing. At the end of each chapter there are great self coaching questions or action steps to help you move through your daily challenges. It is a book to read one chapter then think through the questions or actions. It would be a great read and discussion resources you could share with your wife. It is available on Amazon. Take care.

    Sent from my iPad




  • 104.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-30-2018 05:03
    Thank you <g class="gr_ gr_9 gr-alert gr_gramm gr_inline_cards gr_run_anim Punctuation only-ins replaceWithoutSep" id="9" data-gr-id="9">Sharon</g>, I'll check it out.

    ------------------------------
    Chris Jackson
    ------------------------------



  • 105.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-27-2018 13:20
    Hi!!
    I had triple bypass surgery 14 years ago to solve four blockages. I was extremely fortunate and had no heart damage. I was only in the hospital 4 days. Like I said I was very fortunate. I was in good physical shape. I have had 3 stents at 7, 10 and 11 years. My cholesterol medicine was increased and I take blood thinner, medicine to relax my blood vessels, medicine to make them more slippery and blood pressure medicine. That all seems to solve the problem. I watch my weight and exercise. If have trouble buttoning the front of my pants I cut back on calories. I do what ever I want as far as activities. I enjoy work out side ans remodeling.
    The important thing is I followed the doctors and nurses instructions. I did Cardiac Rehab twice and continue to exercise.I volunteer at one of he local hospitals that allows me to talk to heart patients,which is a real positive experience. 
    We used to have a Mended hearts chapter but dissolved after 25 years due to difficulty finding officers and workers. It was unfortunate because the support was beneficial. I was the chairman of visitors for 10 years. There is never a bad day when you visit.
    The important thing is that you have to work at being healthy and realize you will always have a heart condition but you can live a active and fun life.








    ------------------------------
    Terry Martin
    Lexington IL
    (309) 365-2079
    ------------------------------



  • 106.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-04-2019 13:52
    Hello,
         My name is Dianna Amberg and I've been a member of Mended Hearts since 2016. I am a v-tack, heart failure, Viral cardiomyopathy, LVAD, and T heart transplant  patient. I became involved with Mended Hearts after my heart transplant and was looking for a heart patient support group. I became President for the Fresno Mended Hearts Chapter six months after my heart transplant and I'm still there. Mended Hearts has opened my eyes to all the different types of heart health issues. I encourage all to find there local Chapter and join. We're all here to support, guide, and encourage each other. I hope to learn about everyone from all around the world. Wishing you all the best of your current endeavors. 
                           Heartfully, Dianna Amberg

    ------------------------------
    Dianna Amberg
    Chapter 92 - President
    Mended Hearts
    Lebec, CA
    559-377-1535
    ------------------------------



  • 107.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-05-2019 08:15
    I can't seem to find a chapter in or around Cleveland,Ohio?? Also anyone experience quick  random heart pains 7months after cabg x3? Sometimes there every 5 seconds or just randomly throughout the day, cardiologist seems to think it's because I have an active job+life. Have an EKG in a few weeks but it's scary/annoying.

    ------------------------------
    Dave Klein
    OH
    ------------------------------



  • 108.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2019 08:45
    Hi Dave, 

    We have a great chapter in Cleveland and the President is a wonderful guy that would be happy to welcome  you. You can find their contact information by clicking below. I'm happy to see you are here with us! 

     Chapter 138



    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 109.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2019 09:47
    Hi Dave, I believe there is a mended hearts chapter in akron. Perhaps the national chapter can offer some guidance. Good luck...mike 





  • 110.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2019 17:31
    Chapter 138 is in Cleveland. Here is there contact information.

    V/R

    Richard Short
    Chapter 395 
    Apple Valley CA

    Scott EitmanNewsletter Editor, President(216) 372-1116president@mendedhearts138.org
    William GoellnerTreasurer(614) 296-9637wmgoellner@gmail.com
    Ernie JohnsonVisiting Chairman(440) 655-4627ehjohnson31@att.net





  • 111.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2019 17:53
    Hello, again David,
    I have had post-op chest pain. Mine turned out to be related to my chest healing up. The muscle, nerves, and Sternum take up to a year to heal. I was having both sharp and dull pains for several months after my surgery. They eased up as the months went by. 
    Never be afraid to have them checked out. Better safe than sorry. If you have completed Rehab I suggest you go into phase three of rehab and continue exercising your arm and chest muscles if your doctor gives you the OK. This should speed the recovery and healing of the chest area.
    Just be aware that scar tissue as it stretches also can cause some pain. I know it seems like a double-edged sword but it really does help in the long run. 
    Take care and good vibes to you on your EKG.
    Richard Short
    Chapter 395





  • 112.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2019 08:41
    Welcome Diane!
    Thanks for joining us here in our community! Thank you for volunteering and giving others the gift of hope locally. YAY for your successful gift of life.

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 113.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-14-2019 02:19
    Hello everyone, I am new to Mended Hearts. When I was born, I was diagnosed with several heart conditions and in the last few years they have started to drastically worsen. For most of my life, my conditions weren't too bad. I basically lived a "normal" life as a kid, except for a few things I wasn't able to do because of my heart. Over the years however, that changed. I lived most of my life in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, and I moved to Texas almost three years ago and that's when everything started to fall apart. My conditions worsened rapidly, and I was no longer able to do the things that I loved to do. Fast forward to a few months ago, my doctors informed me that I was getting worse and we needed to put in an action plan. Needless to say after having the same cardiologist team for basically my whole life, and then to get worse in such a quick time, and on top of that meet doctors who I barely knew, let alone trusted with my life was quite terrifying. I met with multiple doctors to get different opinions, and we came to the conclusion that I definitely needed surgery to implant an ICD and that any other surgery was too risky to do at the moment, and we would have to wait until I am more symptomatic to take action. That scared me, isn't that just waiting until I'm almost dying to fix anything?? I felt like I was in a Greys Anatomy episode. The ICD surgery was terrifying, since it was my first heart related surgery, but it was successful. I loved my team of doctors, which made the experience even better. Once I realized how serious this was getting, I started to search for support groups. Is it wrong to feel alone in this even though everyone who is in my life is incredibly helpful and supporting?? I just feel like they don't really understand my feelings, and what it's like to go through this. Is that wrong?? It makes me feel guilty. Anyways, I really hope to gain that support, and build some great friendships within this group. Thank you for reading!!

    ------------------------------
    Peyton Myers
    Helotes TX
    ------------------------------



  • 114.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-15-2019 13:06
    Hello Peyton,
    Having been through my share of medical issues I can understand your comments about feeling alone. That's why this MH forum was started. I can't fully understand your feelings because I had a different condition Aortic valve stenosis and 1 artery that was 50% blocked. I had the valve replaced and 1 bypass Dec 2015. I would urge you to contact your local MH chapter. It appears that there is a Mended Little Hearts chapter in San Antonio , they may be able to help considering you had the problem since you were born. You may also want to seek help from a psychologist or psychiatrist. Everyone deals with their heart issue differently but only you can help yourself by taking the first step to find someone to talk with.
    here is the link to Mended Little Hearts     http://sanantonio.mendedlittlehearts.net/


    Sincerely
    Bill Cekala
    Accredited Visitor Orlando Chapter 296





  • 115.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-16-2019 08:36
    Hi Peyton,
       I was also born with a heart defect. I've found a great organization for those of us who were born with heart defects. It's the Adult Congenital Heart Association (https://www.achaheart.org/). You are definitely not alone there are many of us out there. Feel free to reach out to me if you would like to.


    ------------------------------
    Katie Hawes
    ------------------------------



  • 116.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-15-2019 15:58
    Hello Peyton,
    YOU ARE NOT WRONG. You have every right to feel the way you do. All the medical provider in the world can't feel the way you feel until they are the ones in the bed looking up at those OR lights, Even those of us that have gone thru it ourselves can't fully understand each other. Men, Women, children, all have different emotional baggage and hopes going into these medical procedures. Every procedure has a different outcome depending on the about of damage the heart might have and the technology of the day. 
    If you can find a chapter of MH near you I suggest you go for a visit and sit in on a few meetings. You will find folks like your self that have had the same concerns you have had. You will find folks with conditions worse and better than yours, but they will share similar concerns. 
    You take care and never feel guilty about being fearful or concerned.

    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395






  • 117.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-15-2019 13:30
    Hi, everyone!

    When my youngest daughter was 4 years old, her primary doctor heard a faint clicking sound in her heart at a well-child visit. She got an echo and we found out that she had a bicuspid aortic valve and several other heart defects. She is now 17 and has always been asymptomatic and no surgery has been warranted. About 7 years ago, my daughter's cardiologist suggested that I get screened for a bicuspid valve, given that it is a congenital defect.

    When I got scanned, they found a bicuspid aortic valve, an aortic root aneurysm, an ascending aortic aneurysm, and left iliac artery aneurysm. I am asymptomatic, but the aortic root aneurysm diameter has reached the point where surgery is recommended -- and they would do the valve at the same time. I am planning to go to Massachusetts General Hospital for open heart surgery on April 29. 

    Besides trying to get my head around open heart surgery, I am wrestling with the choice between a mechanical and a tissue valve. I am 56. The surgeon is going to try to repair the bicuspid valve, but somewhat leans towards a mechanical replacement if he cannot. Meanwhile, my cardiologist suggests the tissue valve, saying that I might "only" need one replacement and medical advances might avoid open heart surgery. I am concerned about ongoing anticoagulant medication, monitoring, and lifestyle impacts, but I am also not excited about the prospect of reoperation to replace a tissue valve.

    Take care,
    Peter

    PS – In 2015, I stumbled on a powerful set of articles that won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting and dealt with uncovering and explaining the surprising prevalence of aneurysms. Two articles by Kevin Helliker of the Wall Street Journal -- "A Time Bomb Near My Heart" and "Denying Death No More" -- really hit home for me, capturing my reality at the time I learned of my own aortic aneurysm and buscuspid valve in 2012. I wish I had seen these articles back then. I posted them on Facebook hoping others would benefit. If you are interested in reading them, you can find the articles here:http://www.pulitzer.org/works/2004-Explanatory-Reporting(click on the link next to Explanatory Reporting, scroll down to the list of articles, and click on the two titles mentioned above).



    ------------------------------
    Peter Eglinton
    Portland ME
    ------------------------------



  • 118.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-15-2019 16:04
    Peter,
    I was 59 (Dec 2015) when I had 2 cardiac arrests, 2 pulmonary embolisms and then had my Aortic valve replaced with a "cow valve" I chose this because I have a risk for internal bleeding because of radiation treatments for Hodgkins lymphoma in 1979 and didn't want to risk using an anticoagulant med .
    I did have to make a few lifestyle adjustments to minimize the risk of bleeding such as no alcohol, no hot spicy foods or acidic foods. so far, 2 1/2 years later, i haven't had any internal bleeding.
    I figured that even if I have to have another replacement in 10-15 years there will probably be more technology (such as TAVR being used now in US) or something better in the future.
    However, when I had a 6 month checkup and my cardiologist did a sonogram on my legs he found more clots and we (me, cardiologist, gastroenterologist & oncologist) decided that Warfarin was the way to go. Even with having to take Warfarin it hasn't impacted my life other than the initial INR test to dial in the dose. At first it was every few days then once every 2 weeks and finally once a month.
    I know you are scheduled for surgery April 29 but if you are looking for a second opinion you could contact my cardiac surgeon group in Orlando FL 407-425-1566
    My surgery was done at FL Hospital (now Advent Health) in Orlando, it has one of the highest ratings for heart surgery.
    Hope this helps,
    Bill Cekala
    MH Accredited Visitor Orlando Chapter 296







  • 119.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-03-2019 14:59
    My name is Craig and I'm 56 years old. 6-1 200lbs. Very active. Swimming/hiking/mountain bike/running. Always have been. Had been having some weird chest pain for a few years now but was always able to ride/swim/run through it and it would go away. Chalked that up to something muscular/skeletal. Then back in December, pain wouldn't go away. Visit to cardiologist. After some tests said I had a slight blockage and stint was the answer. Went in to do the stint and immediately saw that stints would not work. The 3 big arteries were blocked. 2 at 100 percent. 1 at 70 percent. Fast forward to the triple bypass.

    Surgeon and cardiologist said the reason I'm still alive is how active I am. My heart grew incredible amounts of what they call collaterals. Both also said that my issue was most likely hereditary. Dad had a heart attack at 69, Grandfather heart attack at 68. Uncles on both side have had heart issues.

    They said I might could have staved off some of this with statins (never took those because I had bad reactions) but it would have just prolonged the inevitable.

    Prognosis is good. Surgeon said if I get on the statins and keep doing what I was doing before, that these new veins will out live me. That's promising.

    So here I am trying to see what others have experienced with their recovery in hopes that I can revel in the theory of "misery loves company".

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 120.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-03-2019 15:57
    ​Welcome aboard, Craig.  I'm 68 years old, had a "minor" heart attack thirteen months ago that didn't even register on the EKG, was told the same thing as you about stents and then underwent a quintuple bypass surgery, followed by two weeks in a medically induced coma after I contracted inhalation pneumonia and a c-diff infection from all the antibiotics they fed me.  I, too, was and am an athlete. I previously had been a gymnast and wrestler and, after college, continued lifting weights, bodyweight workouts and running for the next 45 years.  At 5'7" and, at the time, 185 pounds, I was dumbbell clean and pressing 130 pounds two days prior to my heart attack.

    When I left the hospital and entered rehab, after being immobile for three weeks, I was so weak that I couldn't hold a pen to sign the admission forms or hold utensils to feed myself.  I made rapid progress through three weeks of inpatient rehab and another two months of outpatient rehab before I was cleared to go back to my normal gym.  After 10 months at the gym, I'm now 150 pounds, up to 100 pounds on the dumbbell press (after starting at 30 pounds), doing handstand pushups again, was running until I developed sciatica and, once that cleared up, I've been walking, cycling and climbing stairs.

    I take an ACE inhibitor, a beta blocker twice a day, a statin, a water pill and a low dose aspirin every day, but I am overjoyed to be alive and as active as I was before the heart attack, grateful beyond measure to all the doctors nurses, physical therapists and aides that saved my life and especially to my wife, who was there for me the whole time, not knowing whether I was going to make it, and who nursed me back to health and, I hope and believe, better than before.

    Good luck and good health to you, brother.  You're part of the right community now, and one person's story is more amazing than the next.  We're all proof that nothing is impossible. 

    All the best,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 121.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-03-2019 16:18
    Thanks very much for your story Ira. Patience has never been one of my strong suits. One this I find is that I will have a couple of good days and think to myself .... "Well I'm glad that's all over with!" ... only to be blindsided with a horrible nights sleep (pain/angina/etc) or a bad day (tired/depressed/etc). I'm at that point now where I don't think I'll ever feel normal again for more than a day or so and for me that's so very depressing.

    It helps to hear other people .... even if they are just "internet people" say .... that's normal. Hang in there. Be patient.

    Thanks for taking the time to respond. 

    -c

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 122.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-03-2019 23:04
    Craig,

    You don't need patience if you abandon expectations about how life is supposed to be in the future. Experience fully the gift of life you have been given right now, the only thing that any of us ever can possess, and the future will take care of itself. 

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 123.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 14:20
    Ira,

    So very profound. You are absolutely correct. Today is today and we are not promised a tomorrow. Live for today brother.

    -c

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 124.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 16:22
    ​Craig,

    I find that I don't have any real expectations for the future since coming out of my coma.  Don't get me wrong, I still make plans to meet people, travel, go to business meetings and so on, but I'm not emotionally or psychologically invested in them until they actually happen.  I just understand, almost on a cellular level, that the next instant in time is not promised to me or anyone else and doesn't exist accept in our imaginations.  This is not at all upsetting to me.  To the contrary, it is a very freeing realization, not only because I'm free to focus on right now but because I no longer worry or fear what may or may not happen in the future.  I recognize that the future, expectations, plans are just stories that we create in our minds, that they are illusions without reality and, even if they do come to pass, they likely will occur a different way than we  imagined. 

    I was well on my way to achieving this understanding prior to my heart attack and I was quite calm when I had the heart attack and they told me that I needed emergency bypass surgery, but it didn't fully flower until I awoke from the coma and realized that I was just full of gratitude and joy to be alive in that very moment, and in all the succeeding moments, without regard to where fate ultimately took me.  I believe that what happened to me was a gift and I accept it with gratitude.

    Recover well, my friend.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 125.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 15:09
    Craig,

    I understand your feelings. I am 6 feet 210 and very active. On January 10, 2007, at age 63, my heart stopped during a stress test after my cardiologist had been telling me I was fine. After I was 1 of the 3% who get a second chance at life, with two days later I had a carotid surgeries and then two days later a quintuple bypass. There were multiple post op complications that led to months of procedures culminating in lung surgery April 26. During this time, and afterwards, the days challenged my physical strengths: the nights my emotional ones. 

    I was helped by some great people but I also realized that rehabilitating-to-recovery was my responsibility. I applied the lessons learned while creating improvement plans as Chief Employment Counsel for Gulf Oil and Hercules, to create my own plan. It was so different from anything I had seen, and so successful, that I decided to share it in my book 'One Heart'Two Lives: Managing Your Rehabilitation Program WELL" 
    (OneHeartTwoLivescom.wordpress.com). 

    As discussed in my book, rehabilitation can be an amazing time as I am convinced that my heart stopping taught me a much better understanding of myself, others and and our relationships to our surroundings.

    I just returned from skiing in Utah.

    Brent Zepke

    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    (805) 698-4651
    ------------------------------



  • 126.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 09:53
    ​Hello, Craig,
    I was 69 in 2011 and reasonably fit when I had two heart attacks, resulting in 7 stents and a repaired valve and by-pass -- plus complications --  all within eight months. As I recall, I was back to my pre-onset level of activity, with a weight-lifting restriction, about six months post the last surgery. It's been eight years and, if anything, I'm more physically active. More important is how I feel emotionally. As I constantly tell people, "I don't recommend it, but you can get a lot out of it." No guarantees, of course, but STAY POSITIVE.

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 127.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 14:17
    Hello Bob,

    Hear stories such as yours is so very encouraging. I really appreciate the time you took to respond. Today is 6 weeks for me. Looking forward to 6 months and then 6 years :)

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 128.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 14:50
    Craig,

    Congrats on your new start in life. My story is similar but different. Similar in that I am 6 feet 210 and very active.For years I flunked the EKG but cardiologists
    said I was ok and did not prescribe blood pressure meds as my blood pressure ran 130-140 over 78. During 2006 when I felt "strange" and sweated a lot at the YMCA, or hiking,
    I took comfort in my cardiologist saying I had passed a stress test. Then on January 10, 2007, during another stress test, my heart stopped.

    After being 1 of the 3% who have a second chance at life, two days later I had carotid surgery followed in two days by a quintuple bypass. 
    I had too many complications to list here except to say that my medical odyssey concluded with lung surgery the last week of April.
    In rehabilitation they told me that my excellent health was a strength, and my thoughts were "If I am in excellent health, what am I doing here?"

    I decided that I need to take charge of my rehabilitation and life afterwards since as I jokingly said "I want to meet my visitors vertically." 
    I saw so many people not change their lifestyles that I was inspired to write my book "One Heart-Two Lives: Managing Your Rehabilitation Program WELL"
    (see OneHeartTwoLivescom.wordpress.com).

    I applied my years of creating improvement plans as Chief Employment Counsel for Gulf Oil and Hercules to create one for myself as a heart patient.
    It worked so well that I decided to share it in the hope that it will help others.

    My book discusses the emotional challenges which, to my surprise, were as great as the physical ones. But is it ever worth the effort as I feel great and
    just returned from skiing in Utah. 

    Brent Zepke 

      





  • 129.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 21:19
    Hello Craig,
    My doctor wanted to put me on Statins, but I could not deal with the side effects.I now use an injectable medication called Repatha. My cardiologist was amazed at how fast and how much my cholesterol dropped. After two injections I dropped over 60 points. I give myself the injection once every two weeks and have done that now for over 3 years and my doctor is pleased as punch at my lab results.
    I too have a family history and genic connection to the high cholesterol and this really worked for me and I do not have the side effects of pain and cramping I did with stations.
    The only drawback is the cost, but I still feel it is worth it for me. You will have to determine if your insurance and you can cover it.
    My cardiologist gave me free samples for almost 3 months to determine if it was right for me. It worked and I have not looked back since.
    You may want to discuss this option.

    Take care 
    Richard Short
    Chapter 395





  • 130.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 07:28
    Hello All,

    I'm Anthony Rossi, 55 years old and currently recovering from open heart surgery.  I had an "ascending aortic aneurysm" that was repaired with a synthetic graft and my aortic valve was also replaced.
    Like most aneurysms, mine was discovered by accident.  My new cardiologist sent me for a test called a "Calcium Score" or as I call it, " a poor man's CAT scan".  The test looks for blockages in the arteries in and around your heart.  The good news was that I had no blockages, the bad news was that they discovered that my ascending aorta was dilated by about 5.0cm.  
    The finding was confirmed with a follow up Echocardiogram and then re-confirmed with a high-resolution CAT scan.  The discovery was made in July 2018.
    I met with a cardiothoracic surgeon the following August.  He said that I was right on the borderline for when they do surgery and that we would do a follow up CAT scan in 6 months.
    I had the follow up CAT scan on January 23, 2019 and it indicated that the aneurysm was growing.  On that day, I was scheduled for surgery on February 19, 2019.
    The first week after surgery, I was certain that it would have been much easier to just die because the pain was excruciating.  The drugs helped, but not nearly enough.  One of my nurses told me that the pain was much worse for younger patients (me) as opposed to someone in their 70's and 80's, which my cardiologist confirmed.
    Today, I'm just over 6 weeks recovered and I can't believe the progress.  However, the progress is very slow; the phrase "a little better each day" couldn't be any more appropriate.

    ------------------------------
    Anthony Rossi
    Bedminster NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 131.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 08:04
    Anthony,
    Congratulations on your progress after ascending aortic aneurysm surgery.  Since you live in Bedminster, I assume you had your procedure at Morritown medical center. The team lead by Dr. John Brown is excellent. I had the same surgery in July 2007 and would be glad to meet you.    Mended Hearts of Morris County meets the Fouty Sunday of each month at Gagnon Cardiovascular Institute. Our next meeting is April 28 at 1:30 pm in the wilf conference room. 
    Best Regards,
    Vic Fabry, President 
    Mended Hearts of Morris County
    --
    Vic Fabry
    MHoMC, President
    Greylock Advisors, CEO





  • 132.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-04-2019 08:30
    Thank you for posting your story. I am 56 and going in for the same repairs on April 29, at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. I am nervous about the pain, but am glad to hear that it passes and progress is noticeable. I would welcome any tips you have for getting through the ordeal. Best wishes.

    ------------------------------
    Peter Eglinton
    Portland ME
    ------------------------------



  • 133.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-07-2019 02:09
    Hi Everyone,
      Recently found out about Mended Hearts after being asked to speak at a meeting here in San Diego about living with an LVAD. I am 60 years old. I have had heart issues for about 12 years. I have had a number of stents, a quadruple bypass, a three lead Medtronics ICD, a second open heart surgery in April of 2018 to implant a LVAD and work on  my  Mitral and Tricuspid valves, I also had a cardio conversion while I was in the hospital. I originally didn't want an LVAD  but wanted to hold out for a heart transplant. I didn't relish having three open heart surgeries. They stabilized me and got me going on a drip to wait for a heart and sent me home with the pump. Three days later I met with the transplant team for a follow up and was readmitted. The drip wasn't working well enough. Upon being told they needed to put the LVAD in I asked if there was any alternative. Hospice didn't really feel like an alternative.  So, an LVAD it was and I have been living life with it since while waiting for a heart transplant and going through workup to add a kidney to the transplant. My quadruple, I felt like I was run over by a semitruck. Second one was a walk in the park by comparison. I have started learning to be a Laughter Yoga instructor and have been working to start that idea in a couple local hospitals. My advice would be love, laugh, and don't take yourself or situation too seriously, but do listen to your Docs and follow their guidance if you trust in them. If you don't trust in them, why haven't you found one you do trust? Everyday is a gift and we get to be more aware of that than most. Go open your presents! I look forward to getting to know many of you!!!
    Paul Miller
    San Diego, CA

    ------------------------------
    Paul Miller
    Paul Miller
    San Diego CA
    ------------------------------



  • 134.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-08-2019 10:10
    ​RIGHT ON, Paul!!!

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 135.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-08-2019 11:06
    Hi Paul,

    Laughter Yoga, eh?  That sounds similar to Zen Master Bernie Glassman saying that you should laugh at yourself when you look in the mirror first thing in the morning.  John Cleese, might have said it even better through the Black Knight character in "Monty Python and The Holy Grail." After having all of his limbs cut off by the sword of King Arthur, the Black Knight still refused to yield, stating "It's just a flesh wound...tis but a scratch."  Death?  We laugh at death!

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 136.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 13:01
    Thanks for the share PAUL!
    Laughter YOGA!!!  
    I love that.
    Tried regular Kriya Yoga --  breathing part is good - several positions were a bit hard and made it frustrating to "stick to it"!

    Do you have a link you can share on more info for that!?

    I have friends with a studio -- I can maybe ask them too --  but this is first I ever heard of it!

    I LOVE IT!

    I think laughter may be the way out of my FUNK!!

    ------------------------------
    Martial Thevenot
    CEO - Head Steward
    Perka Hybrid Buildings by Interlock Steel
    Saint Joseph MO
    ------------------------------



  • 137.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-24-2019 03:00

    Hi Martial,

       Here is a link to the organization.

    www.LaughterYoga.org‎

       There is a laughter club finder on the site but at this time I didn't see any available in your state yet.  Here is a link to a Laughter Yoga guide book https://laughteryoga.org/information-booklet/

    There are some relatively inexpensive books on Amazon on how to learn to instruct so anyone could learn and implement. I bought these for the Sharp Cardiac nurses and 50 red noses for Christmas time and did the same for the Scripps rehab facility I did my cardio rehab at. LaughterYoga also has free online webinars and other helpful stuff.

       You might try Googling Laughter Yoga and Missouri, it is offered in some places in your state.  

       Laughter is good for you, check out some of these articles.

    https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/stress-management/in.../art-20044456

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2762283/

    https://www.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/advan.00030.201

     

    H   ope this helps. Sorry for the delay in response. For some reason it doesn't look like it ever left my outbox. When  I found it, I copied it into another account to send

     

    V/r,

    Paul

     






  • 138.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 14:53
    Hello 

    I just joined --  I was diagnosed with DCM - 2.5 years ago.  It's genetic based. (Bad TTN)  Meds helped but weakened me too much for "lifestyle" - though it did move my EF from 25 to 45 in about 15 months.   But I was too tired for my liking...  And I put on almost 20 pounds!   

    So we went to a slightly weaker med - 12 months later - EF dropped to 40.   Stayed the weigh.t -- 

    But now that result stirred me up a little!   Doc did not seem too concerned.

    Will it get worse? 
    Can I do something else to get it back to getting better?

    I started a discussion post - LIVING WITH CARDIOMYOPATHY...   
    If you have any tips -  I'm all ears --   and will be "all heart" grateful! 
    LOL! 

    I also believe in Prayer.

    Cheers!

    ------------------------------
    Martial Thevenot
    CEO - Head Steward
    Perka Hybrid Buildings by Interlock Steel
    Saint Joseph MO
    ------------------------------



  • 139.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 15:21
    Hello Martel, 
    So glad that you listened to my message on your voicemail this morning. 
    This is the best contact site that there is. 
    You also have my telephone number. Do not hesitate to call me.
    Marvin Keyser
    Mended Hearts 
    Vice President

    ------------------------------
    Marvin Keyser
    Weston FL
    (954) 384-3176
    ------------------------------



  • 140.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 16:50
    Thanks again Marvin!
    I will share with anyone else that might benefit from this!  
    Will even let my cardiologist know!

    Have you any experience with how receptive Doctors are?

    I suspect the younger ones might - being that they are more used to online communications?

    I wonder if there is a psychological correlation with improved heart conditions and being part of a support network???
    Might there be research studies about this eh?

    Food for thought!!

    With best wishes and heartfelt prayers for you and your process too!!

    Cheers friend!

    ------------------------------
    Martial Thevenot
    CEO - Head Steward
    Perka Hybrid Buildings by Interlock Steel
    Saint Joseph MO
    ------------------------------



  • 141.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 17:15
    Martial,

    There are articles all over the internet about how support groups are beneficial to heart health. For starters, check out Support Groups with Heart at www.health.harvard.edu<http://www.health.harvard.edu>.

    Best,

    Ira



    Ira A Reid
    Partner
    Restructuring & Insolvency
    Baker & McKenzie LLP
    452 Fifth Avenue <x-apple-data-detectors://1/1>
    New York, NY 10018 <x-apple-data-detectors://1/1>
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    Tel: +1 212 891 3976<tel:+1%20212%20891%203976>
    Cell: +1 312 927 5306<tel:+1%20312%20927%205306>
    ira.reid@bakermckenzie.com<mailto:ira.reid@bakermckenzie.com>

    [cid:image001.png@01D255EA.C4F897A0]

    RESTRUCTURING
    & INSOLVENCY






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  • 142.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-16-2019 17:39

    Thank you IRA -- 

    I thought it would!
    I will look this up to be more informed!

    Much appreciated!




    ------------------------------
    Martial Thevenot
    CEO - Head Steward
    Perka Hybrid Buildings by Interlock Steel
    Saint Joseph MO
    ------------------------------



  • 143.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-30-2019 13:16
    Greetings! My local chapter called me and told me about this organization, which I am very grateful for. My surgery is in two weeks, and oddly enough, I am not scared. Just a bit daunted. I have a bicuspid aortic valve and enlarged aorta. Since I am already on warfarin, I am getting a mechanical valve. I do have a question: I am looking at wedge pillows for when I get home. I am thinking a 12" high pillow will be best so it will be easier to get out of bed. Any suggestions or advice?
    Laurie Barrera


    ------------------------------
    Laurie Barrera
    Boise ID
    ------------------------------



  • 144.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-31-2019 11:59
    Hello Laurie,
    You may want to practice getting out of bet without pushing off with your arms.
    Try to slide your feet off the bed first and letting their weight help you rise up. The wedge will give you a slightly better angle to do this.
    I had to roll onto my side and then let my feet go to the floor while I used my arms to get up. 
    It hurt no matter what I did, ☺ but I made slight adjustments each time to ease the pain until I healed more. I also used my heart pillow and pushed it against my chest with one hand while pushing off the mattress with the other. 
    Take care,
    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395







  • 145.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-31-2019 13:23
    I recommend to sleep in a recliner. If I had know how much it would hurt getting out of bed I would  have ordered one from the hospital.
    I agree Richard that is how I got out of bed. 
    Laurie so smart to think about it all before you go in. My quadruple by pass in 6/16 was although a painful event as so many things one of the best things to happen to me. Take care of you Laurie. Any time you need insight before or after we are all here.





  • 146.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2019 04:11
    Laurie and Linda,

    I'd like to explore two very interesting feelings  that you expressed.  Laurie said that, oddly enough, she isn't scared about her upcoming open heart surgery, and Linda said that hers was one if the best things that ever happened to her.  Both of these feelings mirror how I feel about my open heart surgery, although possibly for different reasons, and they have come to define my post-surgical life.

    In February 2018, at the age of 67 and still a lifetime athlete and gym rat, I had a supposedly "mild" heart attack followed by emergency quintuple bypass surgery the next morning and post-surgery pneumonia resulting in me being placed in a medically induced coma for two weeks.  When I awoke, I was so weak that I couldn't feed myself, let alone walk, and was sent to an inpatient rehab facility where I made rapid progress toward a full recovery over the following two and a half weeks.  I had no indication of heart problems before the heart attack.  Now 69, I remain an athlete, an old man among boys at my gym, lifting weights, still doing the bodyweight exercises that I did as a high school gymnast and college wrestler, walking and cycling.

    At no time before or after the surgery was I scared.  Instead, from the time that I first became semi-conscious through right now, I have been filled with an immense sense if gratitude to all who saved my life and supported my recovery, as well as a profound connection to all living things, people, animals, trees, everything. I can truly say that happened to me changed my life fir the better, and I wouldn't change anything that happened if I had the power to do so.

    We are on this journey called life together, what Ram Dass described as "walking each other home," and I cannot convey strongly enough the love I have felt and still feel for all existence since that fateful day that I awoke, both physically and spiritually.

    All my love and best wishes to each and all of you. And good luck, Laurie, on your upcoming surgery.  I have a feeling that your lack of fear is the result of you having glimpsed some of what Linda, I and others have so deeply experienced.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 147.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2019 14:56
    Ira,

    I agree with your approach to life during and after rehab. I said it this way, "Today I am convinced that my heart stopping taught me a much better understanding of myself, others, and our relationships to our surroundings" (back cover of "One Heart-Two Lives" (www.OneHeartTwoLivescom.wordpress.com).

    The imrovements in my attitude were captured by my daughter saying, "dad, I wish you had not had a heart problem. But if you did, I wish you had it sooner."

    Brent Zepke

    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    (805) 698-4651
    ------------------------------



  • 148.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2019 16:41
    To be very honest, my Buddhism helps keep me grounded. Thank you for your thoughtful response

    ------------------------------
    Laurie Barrera
    Boise ID
    ------------------------------



  • 149.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2019 18:38
    Laurie,

    Then you are a sangha sister.  I began practicing Zen 36 years ago.  I consider myself still a beginner, but my cardiac event cardiac event was a form of hard enlightenment.

    Namaste.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 150.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-02-2019 15:38
    Yes, indeed. I was introduced to a local sangha 7 years ago, we follow Thich Nhat Hanh. I stopped going for a few years, and recently began attending weekly practice to help myself be better grounded prior to my surgery. My Buddhism is likely the reason I am not afraid nor scared of the surgery. Just daunted. Aortic valve replacement, invasive procedure.

    ------------------------------
    Laurie Barrera
    Boise ID
    ------------------------------



  • 151.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-02-2019 16:50
    Thich Nhat Hanh is a great teacher.  As for your upcoming procedure, when I was in rehab, I met a guy that was recovering from aortic valve replacement.  He was just out of surgery, but was moving around the rehab gym as if he was a dancer.  Put me to shame.  I think you'll be fine with yours.

    Best,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 152.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-31-2019 15:20

    I have a 10" high wedge pillow & think it did wonders for sleeping.  It lifts your head & chest just enough that you feel like you are in the hospital bed with a slight lift.  Does that make sense?  ;)  I have had 3 open heart surgeries & have used the wedge during all 3.  I don't sleep well on my back, but the wedge pillow made all the difference in the world.  Hope this was of some help.  


    Mary Jo Hopkins







  • 153.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-31-2019 15:46
    Hello, 
    I have used one and always recommend one to all of the heart patients I visit at the hospital . 
    Marvin K





  • 154.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-31-2019 18:42
    thank you for your input!

    ------------------------------
    Laurie Barrera
    Boise ID
    ------------------------------



  • 155.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-24-2020 14:14

    Hello,

    May i ask you a favor, Do you have an Amazon account ?

    Thanks,

     





  • 156.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-24-2020 17:36
    Dear Laurie
    A big back support cushion (with arms like college kids use) turned upside down might give you the slant that you are looking for

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 157.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-24-2020 17:37
    Dear Laurie. Good luck with your surgery
    Keep in touch

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 158.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-02-2019 15:22
    Hi  my name is Mike.  56 years old had a heart attack 2 weeks ago, had 2 stents put in, wheeling a life vest, starting cardio rehab and returning to work this week, returning for follow up echo in Nov, my heart at 30% was told I need to get it above 35% or I'll need a pace maker put in, comlpletely changed my diet, walking daily, got myself up a liltle over 5000 steps daily, on my meds.  Feeling lots of depression and anxiety.

    ------------------------------
    Michael Schneider
    ------------------------------



  • 159.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-21-2019 12:58
    Hello! I've been living with an ICD since 2004, currently on my third device. Besides myself, I have several family members and friends who are impacted by heart conditions. 

    My story is best told in my mother's words below:

    April 29th, 2004
    Something was wrong. I was at the clinic with my daughter, waiting for her recovery from a simple out-patient sinus surgery. I watched as other patients came and went. A nurse finally appeared and escorted me into a conference room, where the doctor told me that they could not stabilize her heart. My face went white. Her brother had died from a heart attack when he was 18, and her father had a fatal heart attack when she was 7. They called an ambulance. A cardiologist examined her in the ER, and she was admitted to the cardiac floor for a battery of heart tests.
    They scheduled a different test for each day; chemical stress test, heart catherization, echocardiogram, and an electrophysiology (EP) study. An EP study is a test that records the electrical activity and the electrical pathways of the heart, in order to determine the best treatment for an abnormal heart rhythm. For reasons unknown, the electrophysiogram was rescheduled to Thursday, April 29th.

    The EP study typically takes 4 – 6 hours. Simply put, the patient is sedated, hooked to monitors, an electric wire is threaded through the groin artery into the heart, and electric currents are sent to induce arrhythmias. I settled in the surgery waiting room with a book, expecting a long procedure. Much to my surprise, she was wheeled past me to the recovery room after 20 minutes, with a frightened look on her face. The doctor came in and said "she would need some hand-holding" because her heart had stopped on the table, and she had to be revived.

    I looked at the clock. It was 1 p.m., Thursday, April 29th, 2004, and we were in Indiana, unexpectedly. We were not supposed to be in Indiana on that day, at that time.
    Thursday, April 29th, 1993, at 1 p.m. is the also the day that her brother died, in Indiana. He was not supposed to be in Indiana on that day, either, but took a wrong turn and was lost. He had Sudden Cardiac Arrest while driving my car and died. The doctor got the chills when I told him that both of my children died on the same day of the week, the same month, the same time of day, and neither of them were expected to be in Indiana. I even had his death certificate faxed to the hospital.

    Thanks to advances in medical research, my Amanda is alive! She left the hospital after 6 days with an ICD, (implantable cardioverter-defibrillator), and a future. If only an ICD had been available in 1993, both of my children would still be alive.



    ------------------------------
    Amanda
    ------------------------------



  • 160.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-21-2019 14:54
    Hello Amanda,
    Clearly you have a genetic condition. There is no way these things happen to all family members without that connection. 
    The other thing that is clear to me is that your brother was watching out for you. He was not going to let you go before it was your time. He wanted you to share this story with others. 
    I am a firm believer that we are connected with those that have gone before us and they can look after us while we are here. You had to be there at that time so he could protect you. 
    You are now giving others hope by sharing your story. Bless you and your family for that. Thank you for sharing your story.

    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395





  • 161.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-21-2019 16:38
    Thank you for reaching out Richard! We definitely believe there is a genetic condition. My father died of a heart attack in 1988 when he was 42 years old. Someone must be looking out for me and making sure I still around until my work here is done.

    ------------------------------
    Amanda
    ------------------------------



  • 162.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-22-2019 18:24

    Hello, I am Andrew and my son is Austin. He was born march of 08 with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. In 2012 he had a bad stroke and was put on heart transplant list. Nov 28 2013 he received his new heart. Still today we deal with seizures and mini strokes. We just moved to mesa az june of 2018 and still dont really know any one here and are trying to get involved. He is now 12 but has a brain function on a 6yr old. Gets made fun of alot at school and doesnt really have any friends to hang out with. 


    Sent via the Samsung Galaxy S9+, an AT&T 5G Evolution capable smartphone





  • 163.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-23-2019 12:37
    Hi Andrew, 

    Thank you for sharing and welcome to our community! I wanted to say first off I'm sorry that your son is struggling and it's hard for him to interact with peers. What an awful thing to have to go through. We have a Mended Little Hearts in Phoenix, AZ and while it's not in your town, maybe they have connections that you could reach out to. Angel Olvera is the leader there and they are fabulous! Having him struggle with peers is really tough. Maybe you could check with your local community to see if there are any groups like the special olympics or special needs music or horseback riding. Here, my son (who is 10 and has Down syndrome) is involved in the special olympics, goes to a special needs music class, and takes dance with peers at a local dance studio. Those are just ideas but I was thinking that if you could help him find something he loves to do, he might find friends there. 
    Good luck! And let me know if you need help finding the local MLH group.

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 164.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-23-2019 10:53
    Hi, 

    My name is Megan and i am from Latrobe, PA (close to Pittsburgh). I joined the group because my mom recently had a heart transplant. I will give a little of the back story:

    My mom had a massive heart attack June 1, 2019, which was 2 days after I had my c section with my first baby. The cardiologist in Johnstown, PA kept telling her she was going to "recover" from this heart attack (she never had any heart issues prior to this). They sent her home with a life vest and it went off 10 days later. I am so thankful she had it on. She went back into the hospital and they implanted a pacemaker/defibrillator. This also went off twice in the matter of a little over 2 weeks. Her Cardiologist decided he wanted her to go to UPMC Presbyterian for a second opinion. The cardiologist team performed a heart catherization to see the extent of the damage done from the heart attack. They determined my mom's heart was so damaged she had between 6-12 months to live at it's current state. They recommended she get listed for a heart transplant. Within a week, she had all of the necessary testing and was placed on the list July 19, 2019 as a status 4. They decided let her go home because they said she would most likely be back in the hospital (sooner rather than later) to wait for a heart. On Sunday July 21st at 11AM, my mom received a call that they had a heart for her. My mom is 3 months out and still in the hospital. She has had some setbacks. Her kidneys took a hit during the surgery and she has been on dialysis but we are told her kidneys are waking up. However, she gets dialysis 3x per week and it totally wipes her out. She was in rehab at UPMC Montefiore but had to be moved back to Presby for surgery on a pressure wound she developed from not being moved enough right after her transplant. She was making progress at rehab but lost all of that progress from going back into the hospital. She now has a wound vac because the sore is so bad. She doesn't have much of an appetite and is not eating or drinking much.She is basically starting all over in rehab and will have to learn how to walk again. I know we were not to put a time line on anything but we just felt like she would be further along by now. The set backs definitely impacted her recovery. She was doing so well at rehab but now it is kind of at a stand still. The doctors told her she needs to eat/drink to help heal the wound and to get her strength up. Because she is not eating she is so dizzy and can hardly do some of the things at therapy.  She gets very upset with my dad and I when we try to get her to eat/drink. She told us we need to stop talking to her doctors because they told her if she doesn't start eating more they will but a feeding tube in. We just want whats best for her. I feel like everything is at a stand still. Although I am very grateful my mom received her new heart so fast, this recovery journey is so hard on her and my dad and I (my husband too).   The last almost 6 months have been so hard. Never in a million years did I think this would happen to my mom. We were just getting ready for my son to arrive and she was going to stay with us. We even had plans to travel this summer because I was off on maternity leave. I guess you never know when life is going to throw a curve ball at you. Thank you all for listening. 


    ------------------------------
    Megan Zakraysek-Loughner
    LATROBE PA
    ------------------------------



  • 165.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-23-2019 11:26
    Hi Megan,

    For some reason your story touched my heart this morning. You remind me of my daughter and what she might have written about me 6 months ago. 

    I can only speak to your mom's side. No heart transplant here but CABGx3 on Feb 21, 2019. My daughter was expecting her second little girl in March and one of the things we were focused on was getting me well so we could take care of her. The lesson I had to learn was that no matter what I did, no matter how hard I tried .... my body was going to heal at it's own pace. And it didn't care what I had to do or what I thought was important. I walked, I did everything I was supposed to and then some. I'd have a good day and think that was it! I'm all healed!!!!! Then crash off a cliff ... mentally and physcially. All this to say that your family and your mom ... take this a day at a time. Sometimes it's an hour at a time. She is going to struggle in her own way and maybe in a way you have never seen before. The one thing both my daughters and wife have told me is that I'm different. They are right. I even feel different in my head. I can't help that and your mom can't help it either. The more you push her .... if she's anything like me .... the more she will resist. She has to come to some of these decisions on her own.

    For me one of the things that helped was knowing my daughters were there .... but not there. They both live close. We learned quickly that there were most days when I did not want to see anyone. We got so that they would ask before dropping by and no feelings were ever hurt when I said no. They knew it wasn't them. Even my wife has learned when to just "leave me alone". She knows it's not her .... it's just me. 

    Don't be discouraged. This season will pass. Grab hold of any moment you can that is good and relish it. It's good for you and good for your mom too.

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 166.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-23-2019 12:31
    Hi Megan, 

    I wanted to welcome you here and thank you for sharing your story with us. I'm actually in Greensburg! What a small world. :) My son was born with a CHD and I am now the Executive Director here at Mended Hearts. I'm so sorry things are tough. I know as a caregiver you are experiencing a lot of stress and emotional burden that comes with caring for your mom. I don't have personal advice, but I can say that you want to make sure you take care of yourself, give yourself lots of grace, (and your mom too) and know that you are doing the best you can. The long term struggle must be hard. My brother spent 8 months in the hospital this year with heart issues and my mom was so exhausted and at the end of her rope. Remember that you matter too and to make sure you are resting and eating right and taking time for you. 

    I hope things improve, and if you need any local support, let me know! I'd love to grab a coffee!!

    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 167.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-04-2019 13:27
    Hello, everyone. I'm a 66-year old heart failure patient living in rural Tennessee. Here's some background on what eventually brought me to this forum.

    Let me preface this by saying that when I retired 4 years ago, it was with no intention of sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch waiting for the Grim Reaper to show up. I was in good health, very active, working out 5-6 days/week, doing volunteer work at church and at a local social enterprise that I helped found. I had lots of hobbies to keep me busy in cold weather, loved gardening in warmer weather and cooking every day whatever the weather. I looked forward to traveling overseas again (having spent 20+ years of business travel in Asia, India, Europe and South America). Retirement was wonderful at the start, then was overshadowed when my (retired) husband started having seizures, and finally came to a screeching halt this January 2019 when I suddenly began having heart palpitations and breathing problems. I had never had any kind of cardiac symptoms or issues before, then one morning during circuit training, my heart and lungs went crazy.

    When it happened again the next day, I was too scared to go back to the fitness studio. At around the same time, I suffered a severe cold/flu illness that kept me housebound most of the time. It was caused by a bad reaction to the Lisinopril I began taking in December for elevated blood pressure. Meanwhile, the cardiac symptoms got worse and worse. I could barely climb up 3 steps, struggled to get up from a chair, reach into a kitchen cabinet, you name it… and I went on feeling the symptoms more and more often until I felt that I no longer had any control over my body. Being housebound, especially out here in the country where our nearest neighbors are cows, really did a bad number on me. For the first time, I felt every minute of my age. I went from being superwoman to being a pitiful old lady who could speak of nothing but medical problems.

    After months of tests and backing and forthing to my internist, a heart rhythm cardiologist, and a general cardiologist who is also an internist, I was handed a big load of diagnoses, some of them congenital and others probably caused or worsened by my hypertension:
     Heart failure
     Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
     Left ventricular bundle branch block
     2 heart murmurs
     Atrial septal defects (2 holes in my too-thick septum)

    I couldn't believe it when my cardiologist told me I have heart failure. It came completely out of the blue. There's a history of hypertension in my family, and my mother had a heart murmur, but otherwise there's nothing cardiac. How could my health go from being wonderful one day and then in big trouble the next day?

    One piece of good cardiac news at this point is that I have very little carotid plaque. I'm taking 5 medications for my heart along with 3 that I was already taking for high cholesterol and depression. I have dealt with depression since my teens. I've survived a suicide attempt and 4 psychiatric hospitalizations. I've been in and out of psychotherapy for 30+ years. I have finally found the right combination of meds to control the problem, and although I'm sure it's lurking in there somewhere, depression is not what I'm struggling with now.

    What I'm struggling with now are: frustration with my physical limitations, disappointment, and weight gain. To put it bluntly, I am angry and I feel betrayed. Every time I visit my cardiologist, I see dozens of other patients who are far worse off than I am, grievously ill and unable to care for themselves, dependent on caregivers and doctors to stay alive, never mind thrive. But the next day, I wake up feeling my heart and lungs jumping around in my chest and all I can think of is heart failure's ruination when before the dx, I would have been looking forward to my day.

    Since all this began in January, I have gained 12 lbs. Weight gain didn't surprise me when I was too sick to work out. I was delighted when my cardiologist gave me the OK to go back to my fitness studio. I thought that burning more calories would at least prevent further weight gain, but that didn't happen. When gardening season began, I thought that being active outdoors would help prevent further weight gain, but that didn't happen. So although I love being with my friends at the fitness studio, and I love working outdoors, my body is still betraying me. My BMI is still in the normal range, but most of my wardrobe is too small and I'm very self-conscious of the rolls of blubber around my midsection. I don't understand why that blubber has built up like that because it wasn't there when I weighed 100 lbs. more than I do now. I was shaped like a bowling pin, but without the fat rolls.

    And this brings me to my bariatric situation. After about 20 years of morbid obesity, I had bariatric surgery in 2007. The journey has not been easy, but I lost 120 lbs. by changing my eating (behavior, food choices, cooking) and by making exercise a big part of my life. I had always hated exercise but somehow I learned to enjoy it and even looked forward to it. Working out did (does) wonders for my mental/emotional health as well as my physical health.
    I worked so, so hard to improve my health. I got rid of a CPAP machine, got my blood sugar under control and gained a sense of control over my health. I also got my chronic (fibro) pain under control and then dealt with the side effects that the pain meds (Tramadol, Gabapentin, and more) caused and eventually stopped taking them. I finally did something about the hearing loss that had been diagnosed in my early 30's and (when I got up enough $$) bought hearing aids that reconnected me to important sounds – everything from human speech to environmental sounds. My hearing is still a problem, but I'm grateful for those hearing aids – I'd be in even bigger trouble without them.

    Since losing all that weight, I've published 2 non-fiction books (a self-help book and a cookbook) and attended several bariatric conferences, even participating as a panelist during an ask-the-expert session. I made dozens of new friends, both in-person and online, from all over the country. I published an e-newsletter and wrote a popular bariatric blog for 3 years. I joined a fellow workout pal when (in 2012) she started a social enterprise to help marginalized women in our poor rural community get jobs and improve their quality of living. Working with those women has benefited me at least as much as it's benefited them.

    A few years ago I was baptized and became active in my church, working in the church office, and loving being part of a wonderful church family. Finally, after years of struggle and hard work, my life somehow achieved some balance. But now, like my maternal grandmother when she lost a leg to Paget's disease, I'm mad at God. Why is this happening to me?


    ------------------------------
    Jean McMillan
    TN
    ------------------------------



  • 168.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-07-2019 20:26

    Greetings:  After an echocardiogram in June 2018  it was found that I had a 5.1 cm aneurysm in the ascending aorta...but I did not find out about ​this until August  2019 when I stopped the cardiology office and asked specifically about the echocardiogram.  I then tried to get an appointment with the Doctor who read the echocardiogram and noted the aneurysm.  She wasn't available until late October so after arranging a CTE scan I  took myself to the Mayo Clinic for an update and was happy to find out that at least it had not grown.  I am now at the point of deciding when and where to have this repaired.  I met with a cardiologist at UF and was referred for genetic counseling since I have two daughters and one granddaughter.  I am now 79 years old and do not plan to procrastinate with this.
         I am looking forward to reading about the experiences others have had with this condition.

           Regards,
      H. D. Bassett
       Floral City, FL 



    ------------------------------
    Henry Bassett
    ------------------------------



  • 169.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-08-2019 11:31
    Hello Henry,
    Good for you for not letting this go. Keep pushing forward on this.
    The doctor's office that ran the EKG and did not bother to tell you the results should be avoided at this point. Any provider that does not communicate with you (including the staff) should be avoided in my opinion. There needs to be trust between cardiologists and patients. Without that, you can not move ahead. Do not be afraid of telling the doctor that as well. 
    I switched providers 8 weeks after my bypass surgery because I was not getting the confidence I needed that the staff would answer my questions and the provider did not explain what he was doing. It was the best thing I did. 
    You stay strong and keep being your strongest advocate. Take care 

    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395 





  • 170.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-08-2019 11:53
    Hi everyone,

    I am new to Mended Hearts. I am a 34 y/o male and live a very active life in Austin, TX. I exercise 3-4 times a week and my bmi is 22. I do not currently have any blood pressure or breathing issues.
    Earlier this year I was finally diagnosed with mitral valve prolapse after experiencing some irregular heart beats (PVCs) and the occasional palpitation episode for the last 10 years. Every GP that I've ever went to told me that it was a heart murmur and that I have nothing to worry about. It was until I raised the fact that it was making me a little uncomfortable at times that the GP referred me to a Cardiologist.
    The Cardiologist performed a Echocardiogram as well as fitted a Zio heart monitor and the results were a little scary (severe mitral regurgitation / severe left ventricle enlargement / PVCs / 55% Ejection Fraction). She recommended open heart surgery within a year to fix the mitral valve. I ended up getting a second opinion and the second Cardiologist ordered a cardiac MRI and another Zio heart monitor. The results were the same and he referred me to a Cardio Thoracic Surgeon.

    I am planning on having surgery in February of 2020 and wanted to see if anyone else had experience with Mitral Valve repair? What procedure was performed? How was your recovery process? When were you able to return to every day activities / work? Is anyone here from Austin, TX?


    ------------------------------
    anthony truong
    Austin TX
    ------------------------------



  • 171.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-09-2019 08:02
    Hi, my name is Bonnie Weck, I am the president of chapter 11 in Louisville, Ky. I am here to help people in my area get in touch with others who may have similar issues as themselves and to help them get together to talk about the things that concern them most in this open forum and to invite them to one of our monthly meetings.

    ------------------------------
    Bonnie Weck
    Shepherdsville KY
    (502) 387-4403
    ------------------------------



  • 172.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-09-2019 09:27
    Hello Anthony, 
    I had a mitral valve problem as you do. 
    Ten years ago I have a mitral valve ring placed in 2010 through open hears surgery. 
    I also had quadruple bypass surgery in 1996. 
    My recuperation from the second open heart was much better and I was back n my feet weeks later. I had to work a lot smarter as the chest takes 3 months to heal.
    Today there are more options to repar the mitral valve. Many hospitals go through the groin as a better option. This is something that you may want to look into.
    By all means go to cardiac rehab. 
    Should you want to discuss this with me, please do not hesitate to contact me.

    MARVIN KEYSER
    THE MENDED HEARTS
    National Vice President
    OFFICE: 754-307-6920-  CELL 860-796-8469







  • 173.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-09-2019 09:31
    Bonnie, 
    Thank you for stepping in to help. 
    This forum is great for people to tell their story. 

    Thank you, 


    MARVIN KEYSER
    THE MENDED HEARTS
    National Vice President
    OFFICE: 754-307-6920-  CELL 860-796-8469







  • 174.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-09-2019 12:23
    Hello, Anthony,
    Following two heart attacks  which damaged my mitral valve, I had open heart surgery, all in 2011. (They couldn't go in from the side because the m.i.s had left me with seven stents and it was too crowded. ) surgery was in September. I started rehab after thanksgiving and finished in March. I feel great, am fully active, and have been emotionally transformed. Oh, it was supposed to be a removal but when they got inside they decided a repair would work. )
    My wife and I were so moved, even enriched, by the experience , we wrote a book about it sharing our experiences. Bob and Adele Levin. I WILL KEEP YOU ALIVE. 
    The message is "stay positive ". You may experience moments of fear or depression but you can't imagine how much better you will feel. 

    Sent from my iPhone





  • 175.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-19-2019 09:32
    Hi..I am celebrating my 1 year anniversary today..of my heart attack.  Have lost 50LBS....exercise 6 days a week...and have becoming vegetarian. My body is in the best shape it has been in years.  But my mind is still a mess. Have my good days and bad days...need like minded people to talk with.  Hoping to find them here and help others!

    ------------------------------
    Scott Baker
    Director of IT
    Kaeser & Blair
    Loveland OH
    ------------------------------



  • 176.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-19-2019 14:41
    Hello Scott,
    You are going through the normal mental adjustment that goes along with the kind of trauma our bodies have gone through. The ups and downs have been with me for almost three years now. My downs are fewer than they used to be. 
    One of the things that help me get passed the downs are "Cheat Days". We all had to change our lifestyle to adapt to our new reality. But some of the things that really made us happy in the past we have stopped doing. 
    for some folks, this may be a big T-bone steak and for others a glass of fat buttermilk with pancakes and syrup.
    But if we do away with whatever is it totally we start to miss it and resent our new normal. At least I do. So I cheat now and then. My lab work is good and my vitals are good and I am following my doctors' orders for my meds etc. 
    But some times I still have Garlic Butter on Sourdough bread. Not like I used to but a few times a year. 
    Find something that really made you happy before and go ahead and cheat. As long as you don't make a habit out of it like before your heart event it will be OK.
    Then some of your happy thoughts will come back and you won't resent your new norm.
    It does not have to be food, just something you used to really enjoy in the past and have stopped doing altogether. 
    It helped me and it might help you.

    Take care
    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395





  • 177.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-20-2019 13:17
    Scott,

    I am a facts type of guy with a degree on mathematics and and all degree but was surprised that the emotional/psychological side of recovery was so difficult. I found that that unlike the assistance available in the physical rehabilitation, the "other" was a solo effort. Being one of the 3% who get a second chance at life after m heart stopped was the beginning of wondering if there was a force greater than me that had saved me for a reason. Even having these thoughts was embarrassing as I never thought I was that important. Then I wondered if there was a reason: what was it? 

    I responded to these questions by doing what I was uniquely qualified for: I created a successful format for rehabilitation programs and wrote about it in my book described in my web site OneHeartTwo Livescom.wordpress.com.

    I hope my experiences are helpful to you.

    Brent Zepke 






  • 178.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-23-2020 15:28
    Hello all.

    My name is Sal, I'm 48 years old, and live in Los Angeles. Three months ago I went to the ER with chest pain. I was told I had suffered a minor heart attack, and an angiogram a few hours later revealed that I had five major blockages, including a 95% blockage in the left aortic descending artery. I was admitted to the hospital and fast-tracked for a quintuple bypass two days later. The surgery was successful, and the doctors tell me my heart muscle suffered minimal damage from the heart attack. I had been living a non-heart-healthy lifestyle, so I feel fortunate that I made it through this wake up call with a relatively healthy heart. Since the surgery, I've lost 30 lbs by eating right, walking a couple of miles a day, getting a proper amount of sleep, etc.

    I'm here because despite making great progress, I've had a couple of minor complications, and haven't felt ready to return to my (not-so-heart-healthy) job. I haven't been able to enter a cardiac rehab program (there's a long wait list and my insurance has denied coverage), and feel like I've lacked adequate physical and emotional support to move on to the next stage of my recovery. I'm here seeking advice and direction to resources that might help me move forward, and to offer whatever support I can in return.

    ------------------------------
    Sal
    Los AngelesCA
    ------------------------------



  • 179.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-23-2020 15:51
    Hi Sal,

    Sounds like your surgery was fairly recent. Don't get discouraged that you don't feel back to normal after a few weeks or even a few months. I just hit my 11 month mark and I will say that I didn't start feeling normal again till I hit 10 months. Even then and now I can still have bad days. I've discovered slowly though that now I have more good days than bad. So give yourself time to heal and for Gods sake do not get into the habit of comparing your recovery to that of others. Ask me how I know that one ;) Your body is unique and will heal the way it wants to heal. It will heal!

    As far as rehab, you definitely do not have to be in an approved program. I tried rehab and it just was not for me. The whole time I was in there I was thinking to myself .... "I need someone to tell me this? I can do all this right at my local gym." That's what I did. I also gave myself permission to not go if I didn't feel like it. That's a hard one for me. All that to say, go easy on yourself. You are still pretty early in your recovery. Shoot for that 1 year mark. A lot can happen between now and then. 

    Hang in there brother. It will get better. I promise :)

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 180.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-23-2020 16:56
    Welcome aboard, Sal.  I had to respond to your post because the story of your heart attack and surgery is virtually identical to mine nearly two years ago.  I was an athletic 67 year old at the time, having engaged in serious weight training for 55 years at the time, a former gymnast, wrestler and ling distance runner.  I awoke on a Monday morning with chest discomfort, woke my wife, called 911 and we were off to the hospital.  The EKG was negative but elevated blood enzymes confirmed that I'd had a mild heart attack with minimal heart damage.  An angiogram later that day disclosed that I had five coronary arteries that were severely blocked, including my left anterior descending coronary artery, although I had good collateral circulation that probably saved my life.  I was scheduled for quintuple bypass surgery the next morning.

    I awoke two weeks later, having been placed in a medically induced coma after having contracted bacterial pneumonia from the inhalation tube.  After another week, I was transferred to a rehab hospital where I learned to walk and feed myself again.  I remained in the rehab hospital for three weeks, during which time I made remarkable progress.  When I returned home, I continued in outpatient rehab for another six weeks and also rebuilt my fitness from walking around the block to walking two plus miles a day.  I, too, lost thirty pounds in the process.

    I returned to work (as a lawyer) three months after the surgery, and also returned to my gym, where I began working out the same way I did when I first started strength training at the age of 12.  I did pushups and dead hangs from a pullup bar until I rebuilt my strength to where I could do handstand pushups, pullups including on gymnastic rings, weighted dips barbell and dumbbell presses and deadlifts.  I'm now close to being as strong as I was two years ago on a pound for pound basis (Im still thirty pounds lighter than I was pre-surgery.  I still walk and cycle for fitness as well.  The kids at the gym call me "sir" and I keep looking around to see if they're addressing my father.I look forward to celebrating my 70th birthday this coming July, an athlete still.

    The bottom line is that you can do it.  You can make a full recovery.  Rehab is helpful, especially in the very early days, but I also found that once I gained the strength to walk and feed myself again, I knew my own body from more than half a century of serious training, and I knew how gently or hard I needed to push to make gains without endangering my health.

    There are going to be hard days and easy days in your recovery.  Don't be discouraged as it will get better in time.  This is a long distance run.

    Good luck, brother.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 181.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-24-2020 09:32

     

                  Hello, Sal, and let me second remarks you've already read. One day and a time, and you'll be amazed by how much better you can become.

                  This forum is a good place to share concerns and receive feedback. Our MH chapter has monthly meetings to which members and family are welcome, which many find a helpful form of support.

                  As for physical rehab, I found the program I as enrolled in valuable, but the final message was 30 minutes of cardiovascular exercise per day, six days a week, for the rest of your life. You should feel you are making an effort, but you should not strain. Walking counts. (When it rained I would do supermarket aisles. Some prefer malls, but there are no malls near me.) Now I'm a health club guy, with walls thrown in.

                  Your attitude and orientation sound great. STAY POSITIVE.

    Bob Levin

    Berkeley, CA

    Sent from Mail for Windows 10

     






  • 182.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-26-2020 19:41
    Belated reply to Sal. By now I expect you have several messages so mind will be brief. Regarding the lack of support for your insurance company. Did you have a script from the Dr. for a specific  number of weeks in cardiac rehab? Many companies will not respond without the doctors  scripts. You may also search out other hospitals in the area to find an opening but by all means. it's important that you the proper workout that cardiac rehab will give you while you're being monitored before you go back to work. You may also want to be sure your doctor approves you going back to work. I also suggest you contact your employer to discuss the possibilities of part-time employment. It may be to the yours employer advantage in addition to yours. When you do go back to work you may find that you will be tired much more than normal at your work. your email did not say anything about depression or concern for other heart problems. It's very normal, anybody that has a zipper in their chest usually asked the question" why me". There are no specific answers but cardiac rehab and discussion with other heart patients will help. you mentioned your work was not necessarily heart work. It may be time to look for another field. Last but not least you're very fortunate that your condition was identified early a relatively young age. The doctors report you mentioned is promising for a long future,I wish you well. Dr. Bill. Chapter 179 (past President)

    ------------------------------
    Dr Bill
    Ryan. PhD.
    Elkton MD. USA
    443 485 6266[
    Mended Hearts Chapter 179. Past Pres.
    ------------------------------



  • 183.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-26-2020 23:11
    Welcome to the group Sal!
    Congratulations on the weight loss! You say you live in Los Angeles, if you don't mind the traffic I know of an awesome cardiac rehab in Santa Clarita. Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital. The nurses there are absolutely wonderful! They even make exercising fun! 
    That's where I went for my rehab, I drove 2 hours each way 3 days a week. I'm not sure if they have a waiting list but I got in a few weeks after my surgery. Along with the rehab they also have a 1/2 hour education class on Mondays as part of their program. They are all very kind and caring and are great for emotional support as well. I still pop in to visit with them when I'm at my Dr appts. 
    Best of luck to you on your recovery!
    Michelle

    ------------------------------
    michelle leverett

    ------------------------------



  • 184.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-05-2020 19:25

    Message especially for Bill Ryan PhD 
    my cardiac surgeon in Plano Texas is named Bill Ryan. So i read your whole note, thinking you were him. You  give the same advice he would!!! 

    thanks !!! 



    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas TX
    (214) 850-0219
    ------------------------------



  • 185.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-06-2020 09:38
    Dr. Phil and others,

    With regard to rehab, after my quintuples bypass, I decided that my I would try what I call "formal rehab," meaning conducted by a nurse in controlled conditions. If I did not find it beneficial then stop, which never happened. The nurse identified my breathing problem and referred me to a specialist who identified that the lubricant on the sides of my lungs had been rubbed off during heart surgery. Every breath caused friction. Most peoples bodies reproduce the lubricant: mine did not. My body sensed a problem and kept sending so much liquid into my chest cavity that it overwhelmed its capability to dispose of it: it accumulated and was slowly putting such pressure on my lungs that each breath became more difficult. The doc physically drained two litters from my chest. A few weeks later this scenario was repeated. The third time led to lung surgery.

    Without formal rehab identifying my problem, my fate would have been a greatly reduced lifestyle with a constant risk of instant death.

    Brent Zepke


    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    (805) 698-4651
    ------------------------------



  • 186.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-24-2020 15:18
    Hello Sal,
    It sounds like you are doing the right things to get back on your feet. See if your insurance helps to pay for a gym membership since they do not do cardiac rehab. Many of the gyms out there have registered physical therapists and or trainers. If you discuss with them what has occurred they can develop a training program that will start you out slow and work your way up from there. 
    Be sure to check with your doctor as well before you start. It might be a technicality in your insurance that will work for you. It is worth a couple of phone calls to find out. 
    As for work, I returned to work Part-time 8 weeks after my CABG. Work your way back slowly and it will be easier. I tired easier, and so will you, so go easy at first.
    I hope this information helps.
    Take care,

    Richard Short 
    Chapter 395






  • 187.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-10-2020 02:45

    Hi! I'm a new member, with late stage congestive heart failure after idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy landed me in ICU with cardiogenic shock about 14 months ago. Now I'm facing a heart transplant because traditional therapies haven't worked. I do cardiac rehab, take my meds, keep to a low sodium and restricted fluid diet, with BP and daily weights and everything tracked on spreadsheets...which I drew up while still in ICU, cuz I'm way too much of a nerd.


    I'm hoping, new as I am to this whole thing, that I can figure stuff out well enough to navigate the transplant system adequately. But I'm apprehensive and impatient all at once.



    ------------------------------
    Rachel McGonagill
    OR
    ------------------------------



  • 188.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-09-2020 14:09
    Hello, I'm Leah and new to the group. I had open heart surgery for patent ductus at age 2 (in 1972) and for ASD when I was 6 (in 1976). I was 49 when I developed pericarditis and they found a 4.1cm aneurysm in my ascending aorta, a year later it is 4.3. We live in a small town now and our health care options are very limited. The cardiologist I've been seeing seems to be downplaying this and I'm at a point where I need to educate myself better about my conditions and my options.

    ------------------------------
    Leah Rehberg
    Creative Consultant/Owner
    Deer Mountain Media
    Three Lakes
    ------------------------------



  • 189.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-09-2020 14:23
    Hi Leah,

    Welcome to Mended Hearts.  You've come to the right place.  I don't have any experience with aneurisms, but there are plenty of people on this site who do and could provide you with the wisdom of their experiences.  

    Since you say that you're in a small town with few health care options, though, I thought it might be helpful to others wanting to assist you if you could let us know where exactly you are located, the name of the nearest larger city and its proximity to you.

    Best regards,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 190.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-09-2020 14:35
    Thanks, Ira. I'm in Three Lakes, Wisconsin. We're about 4-5 hours each of these cities - Milwaukee and Madison in Wisconsin, or Minneapolis, MN.

    ------------------------------
    Leah Rehberg
    Creative Consultant/Owner
    Deer Mountain Media
    Three Lakes, WI
    ------------------------------



  • 191.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 03-10-2020 01:20
    Hi Leah, 
    I am in Green Bay and have a cabin in Northern Michigan, and yes you are quite a ride to Milwaukee or Madison but there are excellent facilities in Eagle River, Wi, or in Rhinelander Wi, or even in Iron River, Mi.  

    I would get a second or even third opinion on your aneuryism 

    I do hope you do this sooner rather then later

    M





  • 192.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-13-2020 11:27
      |   view attached
    A few years ago, I was asked to document my story.  I've had many ablations since that day, but overall I am a healthy, grateful mother and grandmother...and I am a strong believer of "Giving Back".


    ------------------------------
    JANET MALONE
    MUNSTER IN
    ------------------------------

    Attachment(s)

    rtf
    Heart Month story-2.rtf   55 KB 1 version


  • 193.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-27-2020 12:14
    Larry Perry


    Oakland,CA
    Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device


    Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device





  • 194.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-27-2020 15:53
    Hi Everyone!

    Nearly 4 weeks post op CABG x2 at Kaiser Santa Clara (Dr. Scofield) and doing great (53yr old). I had a single stent last October and for 6 months did awesome but then had shortness of breath and pain in right arm but only when running or biking or hiking. Angiogram showed 90% blockage of stent and new 80% blockage on main trunk left artery (widow maker). If I wasn't active, I can totally see how one could just ignore it until a MI happens. No wonder the stats on heart disease!  Main incision healed and fading, 3 drains slowly healing and leg taking a bit longer but we'll get there.  Even did a little (very little) on the rowing machine this week.

    I want to talk about diet and heart disease. After my surgery, I discovered Dr. Esselstyn and his studies, book and cookbook (wife/daughter) on how to prevent and reverse heart disease. I was eating balanced before the CABG but now I have totally shifted my diet to whole food plant based, no dairy, no nuts, no oils trying to follow Dr. Esselstyn's recommendation as much as possible. Other sources for these studies are Dr. Gregor's "How Not to Die" (great book), Dr. T. Colin Cambell's "The China Study", their lectures you can find on YouTube, and movies like "Game Changers" on Netflix (very compelling movie with data sources).  There are verified instances where folks have actually chosen to shift to this diet and reverse heart disease and chose not (against Dr's wishes/strong advice) to undergo CAGB OHS. I am interested in hearing from any others who have an opinion or experience with a whole food plant based diet good or bad, what other research you may have found, and of course general opinions.

    Send me a note if you want links or more info on the sources I mentioned above. Looking forward in engaging and discussing! 

    Thanks!
    Alan
    dowdellea@gmail.com
    408 310 8222

    ------------------------------
    Alan Dowdell
    San Jose CA
    ------------------------------



  • 195.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-13-2020 12:14
    Hi Andrea,
    I hope you can help me. I find  this site very confusing; I don't understand how it works. 
    I had my heart attack in January of this year. I am currently in rehab; however that will end soon. I'm not sure what to do after rehab.
    I'm not sure where to post . Thanks, Janis Miner

    ------------------------------
    Janis MINER
    Rochester NY
    ------------------------------



  • 196.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-13-2020 15:10
    Hello Janis,
    My name is Richard and like you, I have had heart surgery. You have logged into the right place to have questions answered and to answer the questions of others. This format is here to help all of us that have heart issues or with family members with heart issues to get information and find support both in our area and or nationally. 
    I am glad you are progressing well. Once you complete rehab phase 1 ask if your facility has rehab phase 2. At St Mary's where I went to rehab, they have that program and it was a minimal cost and it helped me a lot. If they don't you can always check with a local sports medicine clinic or physical rehab center near you to see if they can assist. 
    If none of that is available or it just does not fit into your schedule I suggest you continue with an exercise program of your own. It does not have to be anything fancy, but just be sure to keep active and try to stay on a regular schedule with it. Sometimes a local gym will have certified physical therapists on staff or the cardiac rehab nurses can provide you with information about a program that can help.
    I also suggest you contact the local chapter of Mended Hearts nearest to you. See if they have meetings and/or programs that can assist. Join the group and see what all they can do to help.
    Take care and stay safe,
    Richard Short
    Mended Hearts Chapter 395
     





  • 197.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-13-2020 15:25
    Hi Janice!

    Richard is right. You're in the right place! Let us know if you have any questions and there are lots of people here who are willing to share their experiences. 

    Good luck!

    Andrea Baer
    Executive Director
    Mended Hearts
    www.mendedhearts.org
    724-396-7820






  • 198.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-14-2020 18:05
    Hi again,
    Accutally I didn't have any surgery.  After my heart attack they ran a lot of tests and found out my arteries are clogged with plaque. I have severe Atherosclerosis. So severe that the doctors rulled out bypass suregery and stents. Yikes!

    I continue to do my best to eat heart healthy and finish rehab. I am also diabetic 2, have rhuematism. and a very bad back.  I am not sure how I can continue to exercise after rehab because the Y has such limited hours and activities.


    ------------------------------
    Janis MINER
    Rochester NY
    ------------------------------



  • 199.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-15-2020 08:10
    Janis,

    One good thing about COVID-19 is that lots of providers have begun offering online/virtual classes and activities. You might want to contact your medical insurance company to find out what's available to you. There are also Facebook streaming exercise classes, including Silver Sneakers (exercise for old folks like me).

    I highly recommend continuing to exercise after your rehab is done,  if only because it's good for mental as well as physical health!

    Jean





  • 200.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-15-2020 10:47
    Janis,

    You might want to get a second opinion about that bypass surgery.  I never had any symptoms before my "mild" heart attack almost three years ago, and then the doctors informed me that I had severe blockages, including in my left anterior descending coronary artery (the widowmaker) and they scheduled me for emergency quintuple bypass surgery at 6 am the next morning.

    On the other hand, my uncle failed a stress test when he was in his early 70's and the doctors said that his coronary arteries were very blocked but that he seemed to have good collateral circulation and they recommended that he not have surgery.  He's now 85 and hasn't had any problems since.

    Maybe you won't need surgery as your doctor suggested, but maybe there's no harm in letting someone else take a second look?

    All the best,

    Ira


    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 201.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-15-2020 11:03
    Folks,

    I agree with Ira on obtaining a second opinion. In decades of practicing law I never saw exactly the same situation twice. Being a lawyer meant trying to be as objective as possible in narrowing the issues but every decision ultimately required professional judgement. I believe that is the role of a professional, be it in the practice of law or medicine. Reasonable professionals can disagree. A reputable professional would encourage a second opinion for your sake, as well as to perhaps learn something his, or her, self. 

    You are responsible for your life.

    Brent Zepke





  • 202.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-16-2020 09:08
    HI Brent & Ira,
    I was at Strong Memorial hospital in Rochester NY.  They are well known for thier cardiac care. I have confidence in my medical team. I rheumatoid arthritis in my ribs and sternum, I don't know how well I would heal from open heart surgery. 
    They are treating me with meds, diet and exercise.  I feel better than I have in years.

    ------------------------------
    Janis MINER
    Rochester NY
    ------------------------------



  • 203.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-16-2020 10:30
    That's great you feel so well, Janis!  And it is a great thing to have confidence in your medical team.  l don't have rheumatoid arthritis, but I have heard how painful it can be.  I have gout and. when I have an attack, it truly is incapacitating so I have at least a slight glimmer if how you might feel.

    I wish you the same wonderful health my uncle has enjoyed and is still enjoying at age 85 in the dozen or so years it has been since his doctors told him not to have bypass surgery.

    By the way, everyone, I remember reading several medical studies stating the bypass surgery does not increase life expectancy but is important to reduce or eliminate symptoms such as angina.  I've always wondered about whether that's true, particularly since I was symptom free before I had my heart attack and surgery.  Obviously, my doctors disagreed, so maybe the studies I read have been rejected.  Anybody familiar with the medical literature on this issue?

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 204.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-17-2020 02:23
    I am another Ira, from Salem,  OR. I have been reading your situation Janis and I do have a few suggestions. I was a volunteer with Mended Hearts for many years and a person who has had two open-heart surgeries and 15 stints. So I know how one feels having these different procedures. II don't know your age, regardless, it is better to avoid surgery if at all possible. Today with all the new methods with heart treatment, meds, diet and, exercise given a try may be the answer.

    I am not a doctor, just speaking from my own experience Having rheumatoid arthritis in your ribs can cause a lot of pain after by-pass surgery. If at all possible, wait and see how you do with the treatment they are giving you at this time. Should your doctor really feel surgery is required?  then I wish you well.

    Be positive, many many people have had by-pass surgery. Today it has come a long way from what it was when I had my first by-pass in 1980. I am still around at 92 and kicking.

    Ira Friedman
    Salem, Oregon





  • 205.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-18-2020 18:43
    dear Janis
    be sure when you exercise after Rehab to follow their recommendations 
    Some rehabs ( i don't  know what with Covid-19 restrictions) have a maintenence program which is usually inexpensive and you gave the comfort of having therapist nearby( even though they are not specifically taking care if you )

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas TX
    (214) 850-0219
    ------------------------------



  • 206.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-19-2020 20:44
    Marilyn and Ira,

    Similar to Ira, after passing a stress test in January, 2006, during the year when I felt tired or strange, relying on the stress test I attributed it to being older and out-of-shape. After my heart stopped during a stress test on January 10, 2007, I learned that stress tests only consider arteries blocked if the blockage is greater than 70%. In 2007, mine were 80%, 90% and 100%. Since blockage occurs at a pace of about 1-2% a year, it was not possible for the three of mine to go there in a year from less than 70%. The test in 2006 was either improperly administered or interpreted. Doctors' opinions are only as good as the data they are given, and even then they  can make mistakes. This is not scare you but let you learn from my experiences. I learned to depend more on monitoring myself.

    Brent



    ------------------------------
    Brent Zepke
    Santa Barbara CA
    ------------------------------



  • 207.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-24-2020 17:56
    Hi to everyone out there, I'm  Brigitte DeBiase, 50 years old and was diagnosed with a ascending  aortic aneurysm back in May of 2020 as I went to the ER thinking  I was having a heart attack. I was really stressed from work, had worked by myself during the Covid  lockdown. They didn't  find any signs of a heart attack however on the CT scan they saw that my aortic root was dilated which they measured at a 4.7. This wasn't  a total surprise to me as both of my brothers  have had aortic aneurysms, but it was a huge shock as my sister  and I had hoped that the women in our family  have been spared with no such luck. Our youngest ( half brother) was the 1st to have surgery about 12 years at the age of 25. He had an abdominal aortic dissection  that ended up being an emergency  surgery as the missed it earlier part of the day when he went to the hospital with stomach pain and a severe headache. He had a 2nd surgery on his ascending  aortic root with a cardiopulmonary valve replacement about 11 years after his 1st so at the age of 36. Which was 2 years ago and he's  doing fine. My oldest brother was diagnosed with ascending aortic aneurysm at the age of 47 and had aortic root repair with left aorticvalve repair surgery a few months after being diagnosed 9 years ago. Both of their surgeries were done in Germany. Since my diagnosis I`ve been referred up to Stanford to a cardiopulmonary surgeon as well as a cardiologist that specializes in genetic aortic aneurysms.  I have had genetic testing done with a negative outcome however all the doctors and genetic counselors believe that's  only because  the gene in our family  hasn't been found yet. We also believe that our uncle had it and died from a rupture but an autopsy was never performed. It can't be a coincidence that 3 out of 4 siblings have the same aortic disease. I was scheduled  to have surgery back in mid Aug but a new CT scan showed that my aortic dilation  was a bit smaller that 1st thought. The cardiologist  got a 4.1-4.2 and the radiologist a 4.3 to4.4. I was explained that the size of the aortic dilation matters depending  on the size of the person and the genetic deposition.  I'm a smaller boned female with a strong family history so they don't  want me to go past a 4.5. My brother was at a 5.2 when he had his surgery. I go back in February for a 6 month CT scan.  I`very been watching my BP as well as my HR which they have wanted me to keep pretty low so I am on BP med as well as beta blockers. What I've noticed and learned with this is that most drs ignore the aorta. I have told every dr that about my family history. One dr had me do an Echo 10 years ago where I had nothing but since then no one has checked even though I have been on BP mess for 10 years. I think it's s because I don't fit that person, I'm thin, athletic and otherwise have excellent  health. But I have had high BP for no reason for years and if I wouldn't  have ended up at the hospital in May and the ER dr hadn't taken a closer look,  I don't  think I would have found out until it's too late. Even one of the attending drs in that same local hospital  that they kept me over night told me your heart looks excellent  muchyounger than your years and I asked yes, but what about  my aorta and she just says, not much to worry about just get it checked every 1 to 2 years. So I thought  she's  clearly  not the dr to talk to.

    Take care,
    Brigitte DeBiase 
    Marina, CA










    ------------------------------
    Brigitte DeBiase
    Marina CA
    ------------------------------



  • 208.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-27-2020 17:02
    Dear Bridgette
    thank you for sharing your story and concerns. I am sorry for you and your family heart troubles!!!  Of all the risk factors, family history ( genetics) is the one we have no influence over ( except that we encourage all to look out for trouble and do prevention ) .  
    You are giving us an education on aorta!! Because  of your experience: I am planning to ask my chapter's program chairman to get a speaker in this very important blood vessel.

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas TX
    (214) 850-0219
    ------------------------------



  • 209.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-03-2020 00:19
    Hello to all

    I have found this forum by accident on line browsing around. My name is Slobodan , i live in Europe. I have browsed here for a while from topic to topic and i think it's wonderful what are you doing people with similar health issues connecting and giving support to each other.  I am 39 years old (today). thank God. I had a urgent ascending aorta surgery also with aortic valve replacement. I have had aortic dissection and thanks to quick intervention and 8 hour surgery by 2 excellent surgenons they have saved my life and i had no consequences from the surgery ( it could have been bad because my aorta was already fractured). My father died from the same thing at age of 60 and i did check my self up 2014 and got one diagnosis that i am at the limit (aortic vessel was about 4 mm) then i went for second opinion and the doctor said to me that everything is ok however i would need to do a check up in one or two years. But then i went 6 years living like it does not concerne me (probably our human nature you take the opinion that you want to be true). Big mistake that almost cost me my life. Now i have artificial aorta (top section so to say) and mechanical valve. I will have to take blood thiners and some other medication for the rest of my life. I consider myself lucky if it's only that. I have some irregular heart beat for couple of months now and some chest pain sometimes but my doctor is saying that is normal and it will get better probably will need some meds dose adjusted. Otherwise i am ok , after 6 months and cardio rehab i have gone back to work with some limitations (no lifting heavy weights and exclude activities that require holding your breath for long time.). I check my blood pressure on mornings and evenings (so far it's excellent) and trying to change my diet (eat healthy). I have lost 20 kg after surgery and feel much better than before. When i see a lot of people here having normal lifes after open heart surgery it gives me confidence into my healing process. I think psihological part hits us all very heavy because i for example can go into panic from any small pain in my chest or neck or abdminal area thinking that it's happening again, but i think it will get better with time. It's a pleasure to hear from you all , and read your stories and i hope we all lead a normal , long and all above HAPPY life :) . Stay safe and take care

    ------------------------------
    slobodan sokola
    technical supervisor
    Andritz
    vinkovci
    ------------------------------



  • 210.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-03-2020 02:51
    Siobodan ,
    Thank you so much for sharing g your experience. It gives me more positivity. I get scared that my Anuerysm will burst at 42mm. 
    It's good to know you're well x



    E:   uk W:   uk
    Facebook
    Twitter





  • 211.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-03-2020 10:19
    Hello Slobodan,
    Welcome to the forum. I am glad to see someone from Europe on the forum. I am also glad to see you are doing better and taking the steps to stay that way. Since you have read several other folks' concerns and worries you know that you are not alone with this process. I hope you are able to share this forum with other people you have met through rehab or at your doctor's office. The more people that learn there is a source for information the better. Our fears about our heart conditions are largely based on not knowing what to expect or what to ask. This forum can provide knowledge and with that help remove some of the fear. At least it did for me. 
    I would love to see a Mended Hearts Chapter in Europe. I do not work for the organization but I am sure they would love to see growth anywhere in the world. I look forward to hearing that you are doing well and wish you and your family all the best.
    Gob Bless,

    Richard Short
    MH Chapter 395





  • 212.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-16-2020 13:43
    Hi everyone,

    I came across this site while looking up some information a while back after my doctor appointment.  In 2010 they found my aortic room was dilated (4.4cm) on an echo.  They did a CT and said it came back ok (3.5).  However every year since then they did an echo and it has always been about the same (4.4-4.5).  Last year the echo showed 4.6 so they had me do another CT which came back at 4.5cm.  My cardiologist had said that he felt confident that it was pretty steady over the 10 years they have been monitoring it.  This year he said there was a little growth on the echo and had me do a CT which said it was now 5.0.  They followed up with an MRI which said it ranged from 4.2-4.7 and that the CT overestimated the size.  I met with a cardiac surgeon at Robert Wood Johnson in NJ and he looked at the CT and said that it seemed like it grew some since last year and that he thinks it is now 4.8.  Because my brother has a similar issue they recommend repairing it when it reaches 5.0 rather than 5.5 which is what I had been told by my cardiologist.  I have to do another CT in March and see what it is.  I was hoping it would remain at 4.5 and not grow since that's what it seemed like from the last 10 years.  However, it seems that it is growing a bit now.  Also, I had read there were some less invasive procedures for replacing the aortic root, but the surgeon I met with, who is excellent from everything I have read and heard, said that the only way to repair it is through a traditional open heart sternotomy.  I am going to look through some of the threads on this site and see if anyone has had similar experiences and knows of any less invasive procedures.  If anyone happens to have had good experience with a surgeon in the NJ/NJ/PA area that replaces the aortic root with a less invasive procedure and can share the info I would appreciate it.  Thank you!!

    ------------------------------
    Michael Zorner
    Teacher
    NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 213.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-17-2020 19:22
    Hi Michael,

    Welcome to this great group. I had surgery in March for my ascending aorta, root (bio-Bentall procedure) and valve. I was 67 at the time. My ascending aorta was around 4.9cm, but after decades of monitoring it, my valve forced the issue. My surgeon at the Cleveland Clinic said it could be done minimally invasive but strongly recommended the full slice-and-dice to get the best result – but that was for a valve, root and AA. Since he runs the Heart Institute at CC, I figured he knew what he was talking about. I did a ton of research into full vs. minimal sternotomies. There are a few studies comparing the two, and there are some good videos regarding minimal vs. full on Cleveland Clinic's website. After a few weeks both types of incisions apparently wind up in the same place with the same results. My souvenir, er, scar is 9", and fading. You will likely hear from many folks here that the pain of the incision was considerably less than you would or could possibly imagine. Mine healed quickly and flawlessly and is a constant reminder of how lucky I am. Honestly, my back pain (common with heart surgery) was considerably worse during the first week than my chest. Feel free to reach out if you have any questions. I'm sure a bunch of other folks here will weigh in, as well. You have to have faith in your surgeon and his or her chosen approach. Best of luck with it. Herb

    ------------------------------
    Herb Greenberg
    San Diego CA
    ------------------------------



  • 214.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 11-18-2020 23:42
    Hi Michael. I'm sure you're going to find some reasoning in having a less invasive surgery, but read all you want. If your doctor is telling you the best way to take care of your heart is full OHS, then I would listen. I had a world renowned cardiologist at the Mayo tell me there was no other way to repair my heart. Uh...ok! It's not my 1st choice. Any major surgery is going to be painful and long recovery (heart, hip, etc..) The important thing is that you do what you have to do to continue life with family. That's how I felt. I would never wish OHS on anyone, it sucks! But you will prevail! And, you're not alone. This is a great group !! Godspeed.

    ------------------------------
    [Carrie] [Kashani]
    Parapro
    ISD
    [White Bear Lake [MN]
    Carrie
    ------------------------------



  • 215.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-27-2021 16:38
    Thanks for the reply.  I am going to truck the docs and see what they recommend.  Have to get some testing in a few months and see where everythibng stands.





  • 216.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 12-15-2020 12:55
    Hi, I'm Keith.  October 13 I had one stent placed in my right coronary artery for 90% blockage.  No heart attack, just discomfort over a period of months.  Never impacted my workouts, which was mostly weightlifting.  I'm 59, never smoker, occasional beer drinker, weighed in at about 190.  Endoscopy ruled out GERD at end of September, then a trip to the ER on 10 Oct with normal EKG, normal x ray, and normal blood work led to a catheterization and the stent.  I was put on plavix, baby aspirin, lipitor 20 mg, lisinopril, and a low fat diet.  

    After about 6 weeks I started to get severe fatigue and chest pains, but after another ER visit with more normal monitoring, doc says it's not my heart.  Last week I weighed in at 176, and we decided to come off the lipitor and go back to a normal diet.  After about 3 days my fatigue and chest pains started to go away, and I'm finally starting to feel normal.  Still have a bit of headache but I'm hoping that will decrease over time as well.  

    The impact of this single stent has been incredible.  After two months of trying to figure this out, I feel like I'm where I should have been after the first week!  It looks like my reaction to lipitor along with a low carb diet came together to really put me out...

    Reading stories here from those who have gone through OHS I am amazed at the recovery times and the encouragement for others.  Anyway, wanted to put my quick story out there in case anyone else is having a similar hard time.  No two recoveries are alike, and nothing is ever easy, it seems.  Thanks for the opportunity to speak up...

    Keith

    ------------------------------
    Keith Martin
    ------------------------------



  • 217.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 12-15-2020 13:15
    you did a good job continuing to pursue your symptoms!!!  you saved your own life . 

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655






  • 218.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 01-26-2021 13:31
    Hello,  I am very new to this site as I just joined yesterday.

    Im 59 and have a 4.5 CM aneurysm on my ascending aorta that was recently found and now after a trip to the cath lab have found that I have at least 5 coronary arteries with 80 to 95% blockage and now have to wait 3 weeks before talking to the surgical team at Stormont Vail here in Topeka.   I have a lot of anxeity and questions and think this will be very good for me to talk to and read about others with similar issues


    ------------------------------
    Bob Nickoley
    Tecumseh KS
    ------------------------------



  • 219.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-13-2021 13:08
    HI all.
    My name is Robin and I latched onto this place by google search as I recall.  I am or at least was a healthy person with very limited affection for MD's with exceptions, and despise the medical system we have created.  Late in September I was getting ready to run a few errands and just didn't feel well.  I was kneeling on the floor to give my pup who was lying our bed a kiss and felt sort of weak, and had trouble generating enough strength to even get myself up to lay down and rest a bit.  My main concern and priority in my life is my pup who is my kid to me.  She had not yet been out to relieve herself and I didn't seem capable in that moment.  Also of note is that I live and care for my elder parents with no one else to help.  Dad is a very active 103 year old but stubborn and knows EVERYthing, and Mom can be quite miserable and challenging and a huge source of stress at 98 with dementia.  It's an exhausting lifestyle particularly since they love my pup but are totally incapable of taking care and looking out for her.  When I am at work (though mostly working remotely now, as a social worker at an office on aging where I have been going on 30 years this year) my pups spends the day secure in our room with all the comforts.  She is the one who helps me cope with all of it!  So on that day I made it to the phone and called a friend who is also a petsitter who came over and got my love out, and then we called the rescue squad.  i was rushed to the local hospital with a major complaint of a horrible back ache, generalized....next thing I knew without even being able to fight them, I was being shoved on a helicopter and transported to the main campus of the Cleveland Clinic where they did emergency surgery for a dissected aorta. 
    All of this would have been traumatic for the average person but I was not...as I feared the system, MD's especially those I didn't know and trust, and I also do not take any meds.  So that made recovery a challenge, but I was doing fairly well.  All were pleased at my recuperation particularly since stroke was a risk and possibility and I showed no signs of that. 
    Luckily my prior good health and years of service at work left me a big pot of sick time to use as I recuperated at home.  That was after the nursing staff bullied me into going to rehab which I objected to from the beginning--let's just say in my area and line of work I knew too much to agree.  Rehab was hell....I couldn't get outside for a bit of fresh air for reasons I still do not understand, the food was beyond dreadful.  They ran out of milk!  No visitors due to Covid.  Very depressing, sad and isolating.  I finally had had enough and close to the two week point said I would be leaving.  I knew I would do better at home and was right.  I had an order for cardiac rehab and never used it, wanting to limit my risk for Covid.  My daily activiites at home were adequate..up and down the stairs to get to the kitchen, take my pup out etc.  Walking the aisles at Costco far better than hospital hallways! 
    Taking the meds (oodles of them) was a horrible challenge as I have never mastered in spite of hearing the best advice and hints, swallowing pills.  On top of it, although ti was a known problem when in the hospital they also, in spite of near normal lab reports, prescribed HUGE supplements.  Things easily obtained in food.  A further reflection of a gross lack of consideration and communication at the worldy clinic imo.  So finally at home with no obnoxious nursing staff watching me I was finally in charge of ME.  The stress of the med schedule and having to get them down, and impact on my appetite....I said to myself look, goal number one is to stay alive.  Keep our BP down, stress down.  So I tossed all the pill bottles in a corner and got on with my life, eating, sleeping, moderate physical activity, and here I am alive and kicking nearly 5 months out.  I am eating foods high in the desired nutrients that help to lower BP and have scaled back immensely on all I was doing for my parents.  I put forth great effort to have a follow up and CT against my better judgement with the surgeon; only to be sent home after a 2 hour wait to do the visit virtually.  I have been honest about my medication non compliance and reasons for it.  Rather than bully me the surgeon was wise enough to calmly and simply say the best thing  I could do to help myself would be to keep my BP low.  We giggled as I confirmed he WAS aware of my living situation?  But I am changing.  I  tell myself it is not worth getting upset for or over when the little things make me insane.  Avoidance as a survival skill!  I came across a BP diet on line with recipes high in the nutrients that can help lower it (of course no guarantees).  Very much looking forward to retirement by the end of this year.  Was contemplating, wondering about sooner rather than later but I would take a hit financially.  Of course my health is a huge thought in this; but going earlier I haven't confirmed what my health insurance coverage would be, if any considering I won't hit 65 till November.  The retirement plan I signed up for apparently does not allow a retirement on disability after age 60.  But I can retire early just would take the financial hit and being single I know every dollar will matter.   This pension amount will not change ever beyond a COLA of no more than 3% annually.  One day at a time....
    ​​

    ------------------------------
    Robin Rosner
    N/A
    Cleveland OH
    ------------------------------



  • 220.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-13-2021 20:55
    Dear Robin
    Thanks for Sharing your story with us!
    Sounds like you are recovering well!!!
    You know your body and listened to it, getting help when you needed it!!!
    its a miracle that you were able to get the prompt medical attention you needed as well as care for your parents .
    I learned to avoid stress too : no watching hurricane and tornado news and staying away from politics


    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 221.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-07-2021 08:50
    Hello! My name is Dana. My mother recommended me to join. She had a triple bypass three years ago. Her younger brother had a bypass last year and this year on January 25, 2021 I had a double bypass at 48 years old. Something genetic perhaps they told me. Anyway, I began to have some pain upon exertion in the summer of 2020 while hiking in Sedona, Arizona. I thought I was just out of shape. By October, I found myself unable to walk from one room to the next without pain upon exertion. So I scheduled a routine with a cardiologist which found that I had an abnormal stress echo test. He scheduled an angiogram that got canceled and reschedule for the mid/latter part of January. The angiogram revealed that I had two blockages, one of which was at 100% in the LAD artery. At that point, I wasn't leaving the hospital. Had the double bypass that following Monday. Family couldn't come see me so this was hard. It was completely unexpected and sudden. After release from the ICU three days later, I went home only to return to the hospital two weeks later. I had a DVT in my leg some of which broke off causing small emboli in my lungs. Ironically, I didn't have much breathing difficulty except getting out of breath here and there but I had been having this problem for years. I never associated this with a heart related issue. Another symptom I had prior to bypass was some heal pain in one foot. I am not sure if this is associated with my heart symptoms or not. Anyway, during my second stay in the hospital with my DVD, I had a procedure done to prevent further clots from breaking off and lodging in my lungs. I had an IVC (Inferior Vena Cava) filter put in. Once I was released from second hospital visit, I found myself back in the hospital a third time a week later. This time, a clot in my right atrium. After a course of heparin and other blood thinners, I was released to go home. What an ordeal! I feel like I am finally on the mend. I am working on eating more vegan products and bought cookbooks to help me make my own vegan products along with other staples to avoid things processed. I have been trying to garden for years but this is tough going in Arizona. But I am not giving up. Thanks for hearing my story!

    ------------------------------
    Dana Whiting
    Glendale AZ
    ------------------------------



  • 222.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-07-2021 10:16
    Dana,
    I know it can be overwhelming when unexpected problems come up after you thought that the surgery would be the "fix"
    I had a different set of issues before and after surgery. First I had hodgkins lymphoma in 1979 and received only radiation therapy. At that time there was no chemo and the radiation killed all the cancer. What was unknown at that time were the possible side effects to come 10, 20, 30 years later.
    And this is how my heart surgery was triggered...Nov 18 2015 I had a dark bloody bowel movement. I thought it was a bleeding ulcer (I had 1 in 2010) but there was more blood this time.I immediately went to the ER where they found my  gastroduodinalartery had ruptured.
    Cauterization – did not work,  Ruby Coil (mechanical clotting device) procedure performed. While in ICU after Ruby Coil I developed a  DVT which caused PE and then PEA (pulseless electrical activity) 2 back to back cardiac arrests 1min & 4min  Non-responsive (unconscious) out of PEA, IVC filter inserted to prevent clots

    I was given Hypothermia treatment (cold cool vest lowered body temp to 88 for 30 hrs;  came out of sedation responsive.

      Heart Valve also needed to be replaced due to stenosis from radiation damage, replacement could not be scheduled until cardiac event recovery and no sign of gastro bleeding

     Aortic valve replaced with cow tissue valve and 1xCABG  Mechanical valve could not be used, I could not be on blood thinner (GI bleed).  IVC was preventing clots from traveling. Discharged 12/14/15

    It took me about 6 months before I felt "normal".
    I'm still doing good now other than different issues related to radiation effects to my spine and nerve damage.
    If I could offer some advice... keep track of your activity, how you feel and when you take your meds. I found that after i went through cardiac rehab, the dosage of the meds i was taking were actually making me feel tired/lethargic even after a good night's sleep. I had to argue with my cardiologist that I felt over medicated and finally after wearing a holter monitor he agreed to cut out 1 med and cut another in half.  Keep records so you can show your cardiologist the data if you need to. My opinion is they treat you as the nominal person because that's what they know but only you know you better than anyone else.

    Bill








  • 223.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-07-2021 18:22
    Dear Dana, What a lot has happened to you!  You are a miracle!  You are so smart to go to hospital immediately as your symptoms  occur. rather than trying to wait them out !  It sounds, even with your setbacks, that you are on the mend .  Please be patient, healing takes time; your body had been through a lot.  Please let others help you.  Wishing you, a complete recovery

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas Tx
    ------------------------------



  • 224.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-16-2021 13:46
    I am a new learner about having my mitral valve repaired next month. Although I have had this for my entire life no one told me at 60 I would need to have open heart surgery.

    ------------------------------
    Cameron Peek
    Deltaville VA
    ------------------------------



  • 225.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-16-2021 13:58
    Cameron-
    I had mine repaired, nearly ten years ago, at age 69, following a major heart attack. Until then nobody was telling me that either, and I thought I was doing everything right. I tell people now, "I don't recommend it,  but you can get a lot out of it." You can reach me at adelbob@comcast.net if you want to "talk" privately at any point on your journey. This forum will prove a great place to share and receive thoughts and experiences.​

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 226.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-17-2021 06:21
    Hello Cameron, welcome!  I had mitral balloon valvuloplasty last Fall.  At that time, the surgeon told me it would eventually close up again, and I will need replacement.  I was shocked, but at least now I know what to expect and watch for.  Up until about a year ago, I didn't even have a cardiologist, my other health care providers acted like my mitral stenosis was no big deal.  

    Best of luck with your upcoming procedure - you can learn a lot from the kind people here.

    ------------------------------
    CAROLYN B
    MD
    ------------------------------



  • 227.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-19-2021 21:22
    Dear Cameron 
    Mitro valves need to be repaired  sometimes;
    My surgery was 8 1/2 years ago.   I was told that I had  a mitro valve prolapse 5 years before the surgery. It was news to me!   But it's possible that it was  mild before then and no doctor had bothered  to tell me about it.  My parents each told me they had it too.  ( but no one told them that they would need surgery).  The cardiologist said that eventually I would need surgery, but to wait until necessary as the techniques were always improving.  I did not take his advice to lose weight and exercise as none of my family took it seriously. 
    There are various surgical approaches for it.  The important part is to have confidence in your surgeon.   Once you have decided to do it, dont postpone.  Get it done.  There is a lot of stress (which you want to avoid)  in the waiting and worrying.   My surgery was scheduled for 2 1/2 months after my appointment with the surgeon; thankfully there was a cancellation two weeks after the appointment and  so it was done sooner.  Worry and delay would have been "the death of me"

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas Tx
    ------------------------------



  • 228.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-27-2021 11:43
    Hello,
    50 years old and 6 weeks ago I was on my way for work and I felt weird. Then I started to get very typical heart attack symptoms, so I detoured to the ED.  As soon as I got out of the car what I thought was bad became 10x worse. Diagnosed with a STEMI and was rushed to the cath lab and had a stint placed. Upon arrival at ICU I started feeling weird again, then it got worse. So, another EKG later I was rushed back to the cath lab because my stint thrombosed. Nothing like having 2 heart attacks in 1 morning!  General good health, no glaring markers that would have been a red flag prior to the event. It's probably due to family history. So anyway depressed that this has happened so early in life and now I feel like a ticking time bomb waiting for it to happen again. Diet has been the hardest thing because I had my colon removed 5 years ago (colitis) and foods with fiber don't digest well and cause a small bowl obstruction. Smoothies have been my go to for now.  Thanks for listening.

    ------------------------------
    Susan Dunn
    Williamsburg VA
    ------------------------------



  • 229.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-27-2021 17:33
    DearSusan: 
    You did the right and smart thing going to the Emergency Room when you did. i am so glad that you were able to get the help you needed. My sister had a similar colon surgery when she was 30 years old ( j pouch) but last summer had to have that removed.  I have the heart issues that started at age 55 but no surgery until
    age 62. So you are a combination of us two: welcome to the family!  
    Have you found a dietian who understands your issues and specific needs?

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas Tx
    ------------------------------



  • 230.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-27-2021 18:16
    Hi Susan. I'm 52, but almost 50 when I was supposed to have gallbladder surgery when pulmonary hypertension was discovered. Ended up having a very large hole in the lower septic chamber of my heart. Also family history of heart disease. It all happened so fast that I suffered from ptsd for a couple years. I gained about 50 lbs. I had to get off my anxiety meds completely. I don't know how you do with low carb eating, but it's been helping me a lot. I also started protein shakes once or twice a day. I find I have been eating smaller portions. I was also low on B12 and D3 vitamins. After 4 months or so I'm feeling much better and more balanced. My depression has subsided and I have more energy. I hope any advice from us here helps you out. It takes time to get to know the different you. Godspeed !

    ------------------------------
    [Carrie] [Kashani]
    Parapro
    ISD
    [White Bear Lake [MN]
    Carrie
    ------------------------------



  • 231.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-04-2021 14:43
    Hi, I hope I'm posting this in the right place. My name is Kevin Roth, I was recently diagnosed with an atrial Myxoma and found the only course of action is open heart surgery. Needless to say I'm a bit freaked out by the prospect. I was hoping to connect with people who could share their stories and offer guidance through a scary time. Thanks-Kevin

    ------------------------------
    kevin roth
    retired
    athens NY
    ------------------------------



  • 232.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-04-2021 15:23
    Hi Kevin, you picked a great group to get in touch with.
    I am sure that someone who has had OPS will get in
    touch with you ASAP

    Don't freak out....This is the best time in History to have a
    procedure like this done...

    Mary





  • 233.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 16:18

    Hi Kevin,


    I am recovering from a open heart surgery on my aortic aneurysm and valve. It is/was psychologically terrifying! I had the procedure at the Cleveland clinic and it was a positive experience from physician engagement to pain management. I intuitively trust my surgeon, and hope you have good care on your journey to recovery.

    KAT



    ------------------------------
    Kim turner
    ------------------------------



  • 234.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 16:25
    Hello Kim......i have had the same thing done to me 2020.....one year now still have some problems but i am lucky to be alive. Keep your head up and if you want to talk i am here.....

    ------------------------------
    slobodan sokola
    technical supervisor
    Andritz
    vinkovci
    ------------------------------



  • 235.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 16:32
    Kevin,

    It's been a long time since I posted on here and for some reason your post here kinda hit me.

    I'm post CABGx3 over 2 years now and feel as though I'm still recovering. The things I have learned are ...

    1) Try not to compare your healing process with others. Your body will heal at it's own pace. Try and be patient with it. It will be difficult but each day/week/month that passes will get you further from surgery and closer to recovery.

    2) Please be aware and watch for anxiety and depression. Honestly, this has been my biggest struggle. I never experienced or suffered from either of those till my surgery. Don't ignore it. Don't think it will go away on it's own. Don't think you can exercise your way out of it. Get help with it if you see signs. You'll know. Trust your instinct. You are the only one that knows your body.

    Hang tough brother. It's a new journey.

    -Craig​

    ------------------------------
    Craig Ellis
    Bremerton WA
    ------------------------------



  • 236.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 20:44
    Hello, my name is Charles I'm 46 and I was diagnosed with congestive heart failure in 2017.   
    It's been an emotional roller coaster for me. I got bad anxiety from of course like everyone thinking is this the my last beat. I have four children and I'm not ready to go I have so much more I wanna do with them and their new families. I'm on my heart meds and my anxiety meds but I can't get over that hump that everything is going to be ok. I do believe in God and I do believe every one here has a purpose or why would we be here telling our stories thanks for listening 

    Charles 

    Sent from my iPhone





  • 237.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 18:11
    Hi all, Ray here from Geneseo, NY.  Back in August of 2020 I had a stent placement for a 100% blockage in my LAD. I knew something was out of place in February 2020 when i had a sharp pain in my tricep and sternum.  It lasted only a few seconds.  I didn't think anyhting of it.  But afterwards my tricep began to ache everytime i was on the elliptical or when i climbed a slight incline.  Finally went to my PCP and he sent me to the cardiologist where they did several tests.  My carotid was clear, but they found some abormalities in my stress test.  I was sent to Rochester General for an angioplasty and that's where they discovered and fixed the blockage.  
      
    For about two months everything was going fine until October when I was coming back from Cardiac Rehab.  I felt dizzy, weak, and it felt like I wasn't even in the car.  Needless to say, it was a little scary.  I got home, called my doctor and he sent me to the Emergency room.  By time I got there all the symptoms had disapperaed and all test were normal.  

    But since then I do have some days where I feel weak, especially in the legs. And now there are new pains that I have never experienced before that I think are associated with the stent.  It gets very frustrating and I feel anxious when it happens.  There are more good days than not, so am thankful for that.  I am a former band director so am involved with several music ensembles that I enjoy playing in or conducting.

    I have lost weight, walk at least 2-3 miles each day, sometime 4-5.  I'm pre-diabetic, but my sugars levels are in the normal range and my A1C is 5.4, cholestoral levels are in the normal range (110). 

    When does it get back to some normalcy??  There are days when I want to throw in the towel.  I felt better pre-stent, even with the tricep pain.  But this feeling of being weak is taking its toll on me.  I have contacted the local Mendedhearts in Rochester (25 miles away), but they aren't meeting right now, and I haven't heard anything from them since the middle of April.  Just getting this all out in words if helpful,  but it would more so to know there is someone I can talk to face to face.

    Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

    ------------------------------
    Raymond Suriani
    Retired teacher
    GENESEO NY
    ------------------------------



  • 238.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 18:54
    Ray,

    here's a short version of my post #219 in this thread.
    If I could offer some advice... keep track of your activity, how you feel and when you take your meds. I found that after i went through cardiac rehab, the dosage of the meds i was taking were actually making me feel tired/lethargic even after a good night's sleep. I had to argue with my cardiologist that I felt over medicated and finally after wearing a holter monitor he agreed to cut out 1 med and cut another in half.  Keep records so you can show your cardiologist the data if you need to. My opinion is they treat you as the nominal person because that's what they know but only you know you better than anyone else.
     
    Bill


    ------------------------------
    Bill Cekala
    Orlando, FL
    ------------------------------



  • 239.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 19:11
    Bill,
    Thank You, thank you, thank you!  Just to have you respond makes me feel better.  I will take your advise.  I see my cardiologist at the end of this month.
    Ray

    ------------------------------
    Raymond Suriani
    Retired teacher
    GENESEO NY
    ------------------------------



  • 240.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 22:47
    Hi everyone. It seems like there are a lot of new people writing in. I felt compelled to write in and talk about the depression that can set in after OHS. I will be coming up on my 3 year birthday. I truly believe I finally was able to get past my depression but it wasn't from any group or individual counseling. It was my cardiologist that helped me. It's not just the shock of having OHS a shock, but so is coming to the realization that we have a bad heart. My cardiologist educated me about heart meds and flat out told me most of them can cause depression. WT? I was furious and argued with him about taking anything anymore. But with his advice, I changed my eating habits, which can help meds work better, and found a dosage that wasn't going to make me feel like it's the end of the world. I also made sure my vitamin levels were good and take supplements for what is low. After a few months, I felt an improvement.  Now it's been about 6 months and I am not sitting in my depression anymore. I'll never be the same pre OHS, but I'm more me now than I have been the last 2 years. Thank you God for having the right people in my life at the right time.

    ------------------------------
    [Carrie] [Kashani]
    Parapro
    ISD
    [White Bear Lake [MN]
    Carrie
    ------------------------------



  • 241.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-06-2021 06:31
    Ray,

    I second what Bill just told you.  That weakness problem definitely might be meds related.  I had a similar problem in the weeks after I came home from my bypass surgery and was feeling lightheaded a lot of the time.  The problem disappeared when I complained and the doc cut my blood pressure meds in half.

    Talk to your doc and experiment.  Everyone's body and reaction to meds is different.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 242.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-06-2021 12:26
    Ira,
    Thanks for responding.  Your reply, and from others, is what I need to hear.  Knowing others are out there is, in its own way, very healing.  I do meet with my cardiologist at the end of this month.  Will report in after that.
    Thanks, again!
    Ray

    ------------------------------
    Raymond Suriani
    Retired teacher
    GENESEO NY
    ------------------------------



  • 243.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-05-2021 19:27
    Hey all,

    I am a 53 F/Columbus Ohio. 5 years ago I was diagnosed with ascending aortic aneurysm and was told, one day, it would need to be repaired. Early March of this year I consulted with Cleveland Clinic and was told surgery was a necessity within the next three months.

    On 4/26/21 I had an AAAR, valve repair & last but not least an ARoot Remodeling @ Cleveland Clinic. Since discharge, I am learning to pace myself and have had a series of aches, pains, and ​new symptoms.  Currently, I am dealing with tachycardia. It is exhausting and from what I am told a normal response from an agitated heart.  

    So right now it is all about not doing too much or too little and learning to manage the intense pulse rate.

    KAT


    ------------------------------
    KAT
    Columbus, Ohio
    ------------------------------



  • 244.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-06-2021 11:25
    Hello. I'm new to the community, and I joined because my mother is about to have AAA surgery. She needs open repair, and I'll be helping her out as she recovers.  I'm diffing through things and getting my bearings on this site, and the info and personal experiences are helping a lot. I'm glad for all of it because it's pretty overwhelming, especially given the difficulties of this past year.

    Looking forward to participating and learning more. Thanks, folks.

    Jessie Young
    Illustrator (www.jessieyoung.com)
    Boston MA

    ------------------------------
    Jessie Young
    illustrator
    MA
    ------------------------------



  • 245.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    This message was posted by a user wishing to remain anonymous
    Posted 08-25-2021 15:23
    This post was removed


  • 246.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-26-2021 10:10
    As long as they are low in fat, sugar and sodium, you are at the right place.​

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 247.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-30-2021 20:10
    Hello,
    I am a grandmother of a 5 yr old heart transplant recipient from Central PA.  She was born with pulmonary atresia and hypoplastic right heart. She received her heart at 3 months of age from CHP.  Since then we have had so many valleys and hills to climb. So many procedures and as most of you know, with CHD, there is never just one defect. Last year she did have rejection and we almost lost her. Luckily after lifeflighting her to CHP and the most wonderful docs waiting on her arrival and by many prayers, they were able to get her back on track and within 3 months she was home.  She is delayed with her education as a result of so many medical issues and trips to hospital and so repeating Prek this year. With Covid, there is even more concern so my daughter is taking it day by day.  My husband and I are very active caregivers from day 1 as my dd is a nurse and her schedule is all over the board.  So much more to report but that is it in a nutshell.  I really want to be able to reach out for support and hear others stories esp from a pediatric side.  Thank you and so excited to be a part of Mended Hearts!

    ------------------------------
    lisa levine
    altoona PA
    ------------------------------



  • 248.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-30-2021 20:18

    Hi Lisa!!
    I'm so glad you're here. My son gets all his care at CHP in Pittsburgh! We are a little east of the city. He's 12 now and had open heart surgery at 11 weeks old. It's nice to meet you. It's so great to connect with others who understand. 



    ------------------------------
    Andrea Baer
    Grapeville PA
    (724) 396-7820
    ------------------------------



  • 249.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2021 06:26
    Hi every one, 

    My name is Gil Meltzer . I am 56 y.o. and a congenital heart patient from Israel. 
    I'm also the founder & CEO of the Israeli Heart Association the 1st (and only) Heart & Cardiovascular nonprofit patient organization in Israel. 
    My 1st OHS was at 1995, following my 1st Stroke. It was a Replacment of a bi-cuspid Aoertic valve with a new machenical valve. (Tik-Tok). This time, fortunatly i was lucky and got away from the stroke with no physical or brain/mental consequences. 

    My 2nd stroke occured at the middle of my 2nd OHS on a winter night of october 2016 . this open heart surgery was to fix an Aneurysm on the base of my Aorta with a replacment of an Aortic Graft. This time unfortunately lady luck was probably out for a cigaret :) . I was woken up by the the staff at the post-surgery ICU a few houres later , just to find out that i was paralysed in 4 lims due to the stroke. 

    To make a long story short.in 2017 ,  After 7 month of hospitalization in an excellent rehbilitation hospital in Tel Aviv, and 2 promises, (the first to my wife and two little ones who where then 4,2) that Dady will retern home as good as new , i was releasd home with a disfunctional right hand, but on my two feet.

    In the beggining of 2019 i've decided to fulfill the 2nd promise i made beck at 2017, this time to my self - to found the 1st heart & cardiovascular patient organization in Israel.
    And iv'e accomplished that one too. 

    The IHA is doing great and despite the covid-19, we are growing repidly and today we have over 5K members.

    If you got this far reading, i appreciiate it alot. 

    Thank you Mended heart for accepting me as a member of your great organization and i'm looking fwd meeting every one here in person or by ...zoom :) 

    All the best,

    Gil Meltzer
    Founder & CEO
    The Israeli-heart association
    www.israeli-heart.org
    gil@israeli-heart.org
    +972-522595765






    ------------------------------
    Gil Meltzer ISRAELI HEART ASSOCIATION
    CEO
    ISRAELI HEART ASSOCIATION
    Tel aviv
    +972-37575556
    ------------------------------



  • 250.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-01-2021 16:08
    L’Shona Tova, Happy New Year

    You are an inspiration to us all.
    After my Open Heart Surgery 9 years ago, and complicated recovery, i started a Psalm saying Tehiliim group which lasted 6 1/2 years.
    Your organization will help many. Thanks gor sgaring your Journey with us

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 251.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-02-2021 08:43
    Hi Gil,

    Thank you for your story.  I'm glad you are doing well and hope you enjoy Mended Hearts as much as I do.

    I had a heart attack and emergency quintuple bypass surgery in February 2018, followed by ventilator pneumonia  and a two week medically induced coma.  After another week in the hospital and a three week stay in a rehab hospital, learning to walk and feed myself again, I went home, began a walking program and eventually back to weightlifting.  

    I was 67 at the time of my heart attack and 71 now.  I retired from the full-time practice of law in October 2020 but still practice part-time on a freelance basis.  I also write.

    I don't know if this is practical since I don't speak Hebrew, but is it possible for a non-Israeli to join the Israeli Heart Association?  Regardless, it would be an honor to be associated with your group in any way.

    Welcome aboard,

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 252.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-02-2021 08:50
    Kudos to you, Gil, on your courage, grit and advocacy for others. Welcome to this forum.  I wish you health and satisfaction every day.

    Gratefully also a survivor and thriving.
    DE

    ------------------------------
    Doris Edwards
    Retired RN
    Dublin, Ohio
    ------------------------------



  • 253.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-03-2021 11:18
    Hi Everyone,
    My name is Cindy and I came across this community just recently and it has already helped so much.  I just turned 50 last month and also found out that I have a 4.3 ascending aortic aneurysm while getting a CT on my lungs after a case of pneumonia.  Scared, freaked out, sad, etc. all the emotions that I am sure most of us get hit immediately.  I contacted the Mayo Clinic that day I found out and have appointment next month, I am grateful to get in but also thinking well I must be bad enough for them to see me. I just want to thank everyone who shares their stories cause it gives me hope that I can survive this.  Scanning the internet certainly did not.

    Thank you for this group!
    Cindy

    ------------------------------
    cindy jones
    self employed
    ------------------------------



  • 254.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-06-2021 15:28
    Hi Cindy, 
    I can definitely relate. It's scary to find out you have an aneurysm. I had the same, 5.0. They found mine at 46. I am now 53 :). I had open heart surgery for the aortic root repair. I'm forever thankful they found it. If you have any questions feel free to reach out. Best of luck!

    ------------------------------
    Donna Thomas
    Coconut Creek FL
    (732) 598-4471
    ------------------------------



  • 255.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-04-2021 17:42

    Hello Everyone,

     

    My name is Darren, I am 52 years old and live near Cambridge in England.

     

    All my life I have suffered from Bradycardia (average 37 BPM) but in March 2021 I learned I also have aortic dilation.

    A month earlier I began coughing up small amounts of blood and suffering occasional chest pain, my doctor scheduled a chest x-ray which didn't show any problems, however a CT in due course revealed an ascending aorta aneurysm measuring 46mm.

    That diagnosis was of concern because my dad's brother died of aortic dissection at age 73.

    Since the diagnosis I have had an Echo, four further CT scans –head, thoracic, abdominal and iliac arteries, an also blood taken for genetic testing?

    I am due to receive the results of these tests from my cardiologist in three weeks, I am both looking forward to the results and worrying what might be revealed?

    I am still couching up small amounts of blood, suffering from sporadic chest pains and my heart feels uncomfortable, my left chest is now bigger than my right and I can no longer sleep on my left side.

     

     

    Peace and good wishes

     

    Darren

      



    ------------------------------
    Darren Tebbitt
    ------------------------------



  • 256.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-04-2021 18:56
    Dear Darren: waiting waiting causes such anxiety ;
    plus you have ongoing symptoms now. What does the doctor offer you now in the meantime for comfort from this coughing etc ? Please call tomorrow and get some help!
    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 257.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 10-19-2021 16:27
    Hello, My name Is Joe and I recently had a CT angiogram with contrast and was told that I have moderate coronary artery diease along with thousands of PVC'S daily. I scored a 126 on the Agaston scale for calcification. <25% stenois of the left descending artery which has me terrified.

    ------------------------------
    Joe Massena
    retired
    hermantown MN
    ------------------------------



  • 258.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-01-2022 08:12
    Hi everyone!

    My name is Saurav and I'm 37 years old and had a heart attack last year 12/25/2020 (right before Thanksgiving). I was aware of high cholesterol since 8 years ago and had been on statins for that. I also was exercising regularly and trying to choose healthy meals. I never imagined I'd be having a heart attack! 

    I was getting my kids (4yo, 1yo) ready to drop them off to my in-laws and was just FaceTiming my mother, who is in Nepal, telling her about this horrible acid reflux I was having, and that I needed to get it checked out. Suddenly, the acid reflux (heartburn) hit and  was on the ground on my knees. I called up my father-in-law who lives 10 mins away and told him to drive me to the emergency cuz my stomach was hurting so bad. En route to the hospital I started sweating a lot and there was pain in my left shoulder and my left elbow and my back. It was pretty excruciating. 

    We finally get to the emergency and thank god there wasn't any line (it was 9am). They finally checked me in and I kept complaining about the pain in my stomach. They then took my EKG and suddenly the pace of things changed. Doctors and nurses swarmed in and gave me aspirin and one of the doctors a young man told me not to worry and that I was now at the hospital and they would take care of me. It was then that it hit me that this wasn't a stomach ache but a heart attack! It never entered my mind. 

    They rushed me to the cath lab and snaked a wire from my thighs to my heart where they saw my LAD was 100% blocked. I still remember the doc at the lab said, "I'm going to blow a balloon at the tip of this wire and it should unblock your artery and you're going to feel warm all over". And he did, and suddenly the pain was no more, I was warm all over. Shortly thereafter I got my second shock. A stent would not be enough I would HAVE to get open heart surgery. An absolute chill rocked me. Things were so normal an hour ago and now I'm hearing I might have a major surgery of the heart!

    But it took some time to sink in, they gave me 6 days for surgery. My wife came visited (all this amidst COVID raging on was very hard for visitations) and bought me the turkey I had marinated just a few days ago but never got to eat. It was all a swirl after that. I knew I was getting OHS but I really didn't know what I was getting into. 1st day of surgery when I came to, had a ventilator in my mouth and it was very uncomfortable I was counting numbers in my head waiting for the 30 minutes to be over so they could take it out. 

    That first night I cried thinking about my children. I took so many things for granted. Now I have a second chance. 
    I think during my recovery someone had given me some brochure about mended hearts but I still hadn't processed what was happening to me so I guess that took me a while. 

    Now (a year later) I am mostly fine, I exercise regularly and eat healthy. My biggest fear is undergoing this experience again so I am doing everything I can to avoid that! There is a genetic side to the story that weighs in against my favor but that's something that's out of my control. 

    I am glad there is a forum for people who have undergone this crazy experience where we can share our stories because it feels like someone else helping bear the burden!




    ------------------------------
    Saurav Shrestha
    Software Engineer
    VA
    ------------------------------



  • 259.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-02-2022 16:35
    Dear Saurav:
    What a story! We are all so glad that all went well. specifically we all have different stories but the overall shock and fright and gratitude are the similar. Please continue to follow up with your doctors and other health regimes. You have much to live for: your wife and children and family!!!
    My one advice to you : ( and i usually give lots of advice) Anytime you or loved one feel that kind of pain etc: CALL 911 first: today’s ambulances are equipped as small Emergency Rooms . They start treating you in your home immediately! the ambulance goes right into the ER, no waiting in line. Then you can call the father-in-law

    This forum provides you an access to share and learn from others. Hopefully after Covid-19, we will go back to having meetings at local hospitals, where you can meet survivors and share support, education, friendships. Support from thise who understand and have been there dine tvat. We are also here to help your caregivers wife etc.
    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 260.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-03-2022 15:50
    Hi Saurav,

    Four years ago, I had a heart attack followed by emergency quintuple bypass surgery the next day.  When I had my heart attack, I was lying in bed around 5:00 a.m. on Monday morning.  I felt a pain in my right shoulder that I knew was not a muscle pain and tightness but no pain in the center of my chest.  If not for the heart attack, I would have been going to the gym and then going to work.

    While I was lying there in the darkness, I knew that it was a heart attack, but I didn't want to believe it. I was an otherwise healthy and athletic guy, a nonsmoker but one who enjoyed a glass of good wine or a fine martini, a man with a stressful job as a corporate lawyer but who long ago learned to let go of stress and and was generally relaxed and happy.  I knew that my father had a mild heart attack at the same age 67 as I was at that time, and we'd both had bleeding ulcers when we were in our mid-thirties.  My father developed Alzheimer's in his late 80's, just as his mother had done, so I figure that if I manage to survive that long, I may have that to look forward to as well.  Well, as. Zen Buddhist, I understand that what we call the "self" is an illusion, so maybe I won't mind or struggle with the dissolution of memory and other indicia of selfhood, but I expect my wife and daughter may not be pleased.

    So I lay in bed, deciding that maybe I better wake my wife and call 911, which I did.  The ambulance took me straightaway to the emergency room, they ran all the usual tests and told me I was going for surgery at 6:30 the next morning.  I wasn't the least bit nervous or scared, but I felt as though I was swept up in the rapid current of a river and I knew that I just needed to go along with the ride in order to survive.  Unlike you, I didn't wake up for a period of three weeks while they kept me in a medically induced coma while I recovered from ventilator induced pneumonia.  I had a series of drug and ICU induced hallucinated adventures during that period, nothing particularly unpleasant, and when I finely awoke, all the tubes were gone and I had no pain.  I did take me some time to separate hallucination from ordinary waking experience, and that was an interesting adventure in itself.

    I did get back to work around three months later, but my heart was no longer in it.  I'd listen to all the office chatter and even respond but, inside, I knew it was unimportant, at least to me, because I had tasted death and I was more interested in self exploration than office politics or even solving legal problems.  And so I retired, after two years, and while I still do a little legal work from home to help pay the bills, I mostly continue exploring the nature of life and consciousness, and enjoying my time on Earth, whatever may be left of it.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 261.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-07-2022 08:05
    Hello!
    It’s been four years since I had my large Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm repaired. By large, I mean 6 cm. I was at extreme risk of having a dissection and had the surgery just in time. It was an open heart procedure called “frozen elephant trunk” of all things. My body temperature had to be lowered by packing my head in ice. I was placed on a heart and lung machine while the cardiovascular team from the “best heart hospital “ worked for hours to save my life. I had breathing problems afterwards, so I had emergency ventilation 3 times. That was my fault for smoking up until the day before my surgery.
    One month later, I was released to a rehab facility near my home to learn to walk again and work with a speech therapist to learn how to swallow again. After another 2 weeks, I was home and worked with a physical therapist that came to my home for a month.
    Six months later, I had the second procedure to attach another stent by the endovascular route to the original stent.
    I’m so grateful and humbled by all of the prayers for me and my family and last, but certainly not least, my wonderful surgical team. They are the best❤️


    Sent from my iPhone Susan J Perez




  • 262.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-08-2022 06:53
    Hi Susan,

    Welcome to the group.  Although we had different medical procedures (I had bypass surgery), we had some similar post-surgical rehab experiences.  I spent the better part of February 2018 hallucinating on a ventilator that I was recovering from surgery in the Bahamas while also saving the hospital and my former shipmate now surgeon and hospital administrator from legal troubles.  And then I awoke, unable to stand, walk or steady my hands to feed myself.  

    I spent another week in the hospital getting my bearings and then was released to a rehab facility where I learned to walk and feed myself again.  I also learned to lift my right arm overhead again instead of just waist level. Doctors attributed that to undetermined loss of oxygen during the surgery. The loss of oxygen in no way interfered with my penchant for wisecracking and quoting famous movie lines to bother the nurses and my physical therapists, nor did it inhibit my ability to gerryrig the wheelchair in order to circumvent the alarm that they wanted to go off whenever I decided to ditch the chair and walk on my own.

    Seriously, though, I felt and feel the same deep sense of gratitude that you feel for all those that saved our lives, including the medical, nursing and rehab staff and family.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 263.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-31-2022 14:58
    Wow that is quite the experience! That waking up from the coma gave me shudders about not being able to discern whether it was real or not.

    I agree that after going through something as life altering the priorities kind of arrange themselves. I too quit my job in a service-oriented software house (which tend to be pretty hectic -- more clients = more money for them) and switched to a company that subcontracts with the government. One project, a lot less stress.

    I've never been much into religion despite having a very devout Hindu mother but now am in the process of reading the Bhagwad Gita and it also explores into topics of consciousness and reality which I found to be pretty interesting. All my mother did was make me visit temples and participate in ceremonies rigorously (which I hated) :D There is something to be said about the practice of spirituality and the passing down of those practices to your children. Not easy!

    Cheers!



    ------------------------------
    Saurav Shrestha
    Software Engineer
    VA
    ------------------------------



  • 264.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-06-2022 17:46
    The spiritual side of your recovery rings true with me . After my heart surgery I was in a medically induced coma for 10 days. Many people prayed for me. Once I was already and understood the complications etc, i wanted to do something in return for the prayers sent my way. I started a tehilim group, where the book of Psalms were said by volunteers ( about 70) who recited various psalms every day for the list of ill people . This group lasted for 7 years


    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 265.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-08-2022 09:30
    Saurav,

    Actually, I wasn't too concerned about whether or not these experiences were "real." I've learned, over many years, a lot of experience and much meditation, that what we think of as real mostly is an illusion.  Moreover, our memories of the past really are a creative fiction in which we remember, embellish, minimize and forget what actually in the interest of our self created movie of our life.  Try talking to an old friend about a shared experience many years ago.  You will find a totally different recollection than your own. And our imagination of what the future will being is really just a fantasy.  It's why they have expressions like "life is what happens when you're busy making plans." Everyone knows this, yet they don't apply it to their own lives.

    So is your office gossip and hopes for a raise and arguing with a friend about some thing that you consider important for the moment any more real that an event you manufactured while in or recovering from a coma that brought you in touch with deep emotions about love and your existence in the universe? As I've said before, when I eventually returned to work, I'd listen to people talk about important subjects, but they were very mundane and unimportant to me in the larger scheme of things.  What is real is the enduring original face as Zen Buddhists call it or soul as Western religions call it or Atman in Hinduism.  Once you are in touch with that, everything is real and nothing is real if you understand what I mean.

    Ira

    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 266.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-08-2022 10:03
    Much wisdom (as usual) in what Ira says. It is difficult to put into practice for me -- to keep it consistently front and center -- but it's been more than a decade since my MIs and OHS and, except for my actual heart muscle, I feel I have benefited in all ways from the experience. I consistently tell people, "I don't recommend it. But you can get a lot out of it."

    ------------------------------
    Bob] Levin
    Berkeley CA
    adelbob@comcast.netRobertRobert
    ------------------------------



  • 267.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-07-2022 08:05

    My name is Kent Barbay and I am from Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia.  I have worked in drug discovery as a medicinal chemist for 19 years.  I am 47 years old.  I suffered a heart attack two months ago in December.  I was at work when I felt symptoms (panic, shortness of breath), not understanding what the cause was.  After driving home, thinking that it would surely get better if I could rest or walk in fresh air, I am very lucky that my wife had the wisdom to immediately call 911. I was rushed to the hospital and found to have 100% blockage of the proximal LAD artery.  I am fortunate that they were able to quickly do surgery to clear the blockage and insert a stent.  I am working to recover through cardiac rehab, changes to diet, and lifestyle changes but I do have heart failure as a result of the heart attack, am currently wearing a LifeVest, and will need to consider getting an ICD if my heart function does not improve.  I tried to take good care of myself before the heart attack, completing 3 marathons in the four years prior, and generally eating healthily, so this was all a surprise to me.  I am trying to learn what I can do to stay as healthy as possible, and looking for ways to have positive things come out of this experience.  



    ------------------------------
    Kent Barbay
    Flourtown PA
    ------------------------------



  • 268.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-07-2022 08:05

    My name is Kent Barbay and I am from Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia.  I have worked in drug discovery as a medicinal chemist for 19 years.  I am 47 years old.  I suffered a heart attack two months ago in December.  I was at work when I felt symptoms (panic, shortness of breath), not understanding what the cause was.  After driving home, thinking that it would surely get better if I could rest or walk in fresh air, I am very lucky that my wife had the wisdom to immediately call 911. I was rushed to the hospital and found to have 100% blockage of the proximal LAD artery.  I am fortunate that they were able to quickly do surgery to clear the blockage and insert a stent.  I am working to recover through cardiac rehab, changes to diet, and lifestyle changes but I do have heart failure as a result of the heart attack, am currently wearing a LifeVest, and will need to consider getting an ICD if my heart function does not improve.  I tried to take good care of myself before the heart attack, completing 3 marathons in the four years prior, and generally eating healthily, so this was all a surprise to me.  I am trying to learn what I can do to stay as healthy as possible, and looking for ways to have positive things come out of this experience.  



    ------------------------------
    Kent Barbay
    Flourtown PA
    ------------------------------



  • 269.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 02-08-2022 02:38

    Welcome to the community Kent!  There are tons of people here who have had all kinds of heart issues and procedures and their experiences will provide some good learning opportunities and also serve as a reminder that you are not alone.  It sounds like you've got a solid attitude regarding the future.  The fact that you took care of yourself and stayed fit before your procedure will aid in your recovery.  My problem, a leaky mitral valve which was surgically repaired 9-years ago, is a little different than yours so I'll let some others who have had heart attacks and stents chime in.  I do know that what happened to you happens to lots of people who are equally as surprised because they too took good care of themselves and had healthy habits.  My best for a smooth recovery.  I'm glad your wife had the wisdom to call 911!



    ------------------------------
    Ed M
    ------------------------------



  • 270.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-21-2022 08:29

    Greetings

    I am Ricardo. I decided to join mended hearts because from lack of motivation, energy, depression and just questions regarding the recovery process. 


    So March 18, I was having severe chest pains. I was unable to shake it off or sleep it off like I usually do (this has been a thing since college). I am a Believer and so I know I heard the Lord say "get up, get dressed and get to the hospital." I took an uber there and went to the ER, and maybe an hour later or so I was getting scans. I was told I had an Aortic Dissection and they needed to perform surgery immediately. Apparently many do not survive an Aortic Dissection. Once out of OR and into ICU I was told by everyone "you should be dead," "it's a miracle you're alive," "you're lucky to be alive" without  fail every time someone came in.  My 



    ------------------------------
    Ricardo
    ------------------------------



  • 271.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-21-2022 08:45

    Greetings

    I am Ricardo and on March 18, 2022 I underwent a life saving procedure due to having an Aortic Dissection. I remember the night I went to the hospital: I had chest pains that felt much different than before. I tried to sit down but the Lord said "get up, get dressed and get to the hospital, you can't shake or sleep this off"

    Doctors, nurses and other staff constantly said "you're lucky to be alive," "you should have died.," "it's a miracle you're alive." Without fail every time someone entered my room they would say that. My pictures  hit home and I just feel differently after having my chest cut open. That aortic dissection was at the upper part of the heart. I am heading home to be closer to family for my second open heart surgery so that the surgeons can repair the lower half.

    I joined this group because from feeling guilty of surviving, to depression, general recovery questions and to have that support. From my groin incision becoming infected (I had gone back to the hospital) to my skin on my fingers peeling in large pieces (entire knuckle, the entire side of my fingers), to constant diarrhea, to my left eye going dark three times since the surgery, I have questions, concerns and need a place to share. This is my first open heart surgery. And to me this is the most serious and detrimental of the last two I had (half of thyroid-October 2019, two surgeries on my lumbar spine-June 2015).

    One of my sisters in Spirit said her grandfather had it. And I found out a childhood friend died because of this. And John Ritter and Alan Thicke both died from this. I give glory to God and though one day I want to hurry and have the second surgery and the next day I don't, I understand it is crucial. I'm still not able to walk far without having to sit down for 20 minutes, and carrying a lot of bags is not humanly possible for me. I still can't sneeze or cough without excruciating pain but I can tell I'm improving.



    ------------------------------
    Ricardo McCrary
    ------------------------------



  • 272.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-21-2022 11:15
    Ricardo my man..... 

    To give you some words of comfort to my brother in aortic dissection. I have had aortic dissection march/2020 , thoratic (top side ) it has hitt me hard during the day , very painful , could not breathe normal, i called ambulance (i am from Europe we don't have 911) by the time they got here my right leg was completely gone I DID NOT FEEL IT AT ALL. Gone to the hosipital , my leg feeling came back but chest pain started so bad they had to give me morphium. After quick CT the verdict was in. Urgent transport to county hospital and urgent surgery. Same here by the grace of GOD i survived , my odds were 50:50 before they have opened me for survival. And in 50% of survival there were high chance for further complications. Hand of God saved me. They have operated on me for 8 straight hours. I have artificial aortic valve on my heart , i have 3 cm prostetic aorta so called straight graft. My aorta is split all the way to my kiddneys. one layer is flapping inside. I have limitations for life i cannot lift more than 10 kg, i cannot go to the gym to lift weights, play contact sports... recovery was long but slowly i came back. I came back to work , i have to take medicine for the rest of my life. But I AM ALIVE! Avoid stress my friend, go for a walk , spend time with your family , fall in love, sleep and eat healthy , enjoy. Listen to your doctor. I have already made two control CT (once every year) and there is no progress on dissection. My doctors gave me hope because they are following up patients now for 10-15 years who live normal lifes after suffered aortic dissection and urgent surgery. One case after urgent surgery, lived to be 90 years old. He had one follow up surgery but he lived a full life and died a old man from old age. We have been dealt a bad hand with aortic dissection no doubt. But maybe it's a wake up call that you need to change something and start living the way God intended for us to live. Depresion , pains when weather is changing , panic attacks...i have had and have it all. It's hard but you have more days in your life thanks to God and modern medicine. Now it's up to you to put more life in your days. 
    You are not alone in this. 
    God bless you all. 
    Slobodan Sokola

    ------------------------------
    slobodan sokola
    technical supervisor
    Andritz
    vinkovci
    ------------------------------



  • 273.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 04-22-2022 15:25
    Thank you so much for the encouraging words. This is a huge life change and I am slightly nervous so the response is very helpful.

    ------------------------------
    Ricardo McCrary
    ------------------------------



  • 274.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-10-2022 08:34
    Greetings

    I am Ricardo and on March 18, 2022 I underwent a life saving procedure due to having an Aortic Dissection. I remember the night I went to the hospital: I had chest pains that felt much different than before. I tried to sit down but the Lord said "get up, get dressed and get to the hospital, you can't shake or sleep this off"

    Doctors, nurses and other staff constantly said "you're lucky to be alive," "you should have died.," "it's a miracle you're alive." Without fail every time someone entered my room they would say that. My pictures  hit home and I just feel differently after having my chest cut open. That aortic dissection was at the upper part of the heart. I am heading home to be closer to family for my second open heart surgery so that the surgeons can repair the lower half.

    I joined this group because from feeling guilty of surviving, to depression, general recovery questions and to have that support. From my groin incision becoming infected (I had gone back to the hospital) to my skin on my fingers peeling in large pieces (entire knuckle, the entire side of my fingers), to constant diarrhea, to my left eye going dark three times since the surgery, I have questions, concerns and need a place to share. This is my first open heart surgery. And to me this is the most serious and detrimental of the last two I had (half of thyroid-October 2019, two surgeries on my lumbar spine-June 2015).

    One of my sisters in Spirit said her grandfather had it. And I found out a childhood friend died because of this. And John Ritter and Alan Thicke both died from this. I give glory to God and though one day I want to hurry and have the second surgery and the next day I don't, I understand it is crucial. I'm still not able to walk far without having to sit down for 20 minutes, and carrying a lot of bags is not humanly possible for me. I still can't sneeze or cough without excruciating pain but I can tell I'm improving.



    ------------------------------
    Ricardo McCrary
    ------------------------------



  • 275.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-10-2022 19:23
    Dear Ricardo
    Some of the symptoms and feelings you are experiencing are not unusual. My concern is your statement “guilty for surviving “. Please out that emotion aside. Gratitude at survival is more important!! you are on the road ( slow, step by step) to recovery. You will always be under the shadow of worry about your heart… that us why the re are regular checkups with the cardiologist. I am 9 1/2 years since my open heart surgery and it’s complications. Because I am alive, I was able to care for my elderly parents and enjoy the blessing of 3 more grandchildren being born. Also after 2 years, I trained and started visiting heart patients in the hospital. This has been very rewarding to me.

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 276.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-10-2022 08:34
    Hi, my name is Rick. I am 75, have 8 stents, and on March 30th went in for a PVC ablation (they burn or freeze scar to prevent extra pvs's) It didn't go as planned, and they determined I needed a pacemaker; however, when they put it in my BP bottomed out and they had to pull it; took 3 hours to stabilize me. The next day I was informed they would be doing open heart surgery - I had no time to research anything or plan mentally. So on April Fools Day 2022 I had quadruple bypass surgery.   I ended up being there 2 weeks, and wound up with a pacemaker as well before I left.  

    4 weeks in, I am still having much pain in the chest, and constant stinging pain.  Is this normal?  If so, how long before this pain will lessen? I can't take Percocet or Hydrocodone, currently taking (2) 50mg Tramadol every 6 hours or so  - sometimes it takes the edge off and sometimes not. 

    My energy is slowly returning, if I could just take the edge off the pain I would feel so much better.  


    ------------------------------
    Rick Chandler
    retired
    Deland FL
    ------------------------------



  • 277.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-18-2022 14:19

    Hi everyone!  

    I'm Sierra, mom of a sweet little 5 year old heart warrior. One of my twins was born with a VSD that he had repaired in 2016 (4 weeks after birth) and also has SVT. The MLH of DC were just an amazing support to me during the most difficult time. I worked in hospitality and was able to contribute with my team with supplies for bravery bags in the past and also was able to bring my little ones to local events hosted by MLH. I have relocated to AZ and am hoping to get involved with a chapter out here and help with volunteer efforts now that I'm a SAHM. :) 



    ------------------------------
    Sierra Blue
    Scottsdale
    ------------------------------



  • 278.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-23-2022 08:15
    Hello, I'm David, 52 years old, married with 4 kids, only one still left at home. I had aortic valve replacement in May of 2016, and I now have a mechanical valve. I've been doing good on the cardiac front since then, but I'm starting to look at weight loss and lifestyle changes again, as I did after the surgery, to address other medical issues related to getting older. I'm on testosterone shots now, and need to start watching sugar and salt intake. My dad had the same valve replaced with a tissue valve in 2012, and he didn't take care of his health. He passed on April 23, and I don't want to go that way. So I'm making the changes, and doing the things. But it's not easy.

    ------------------------------
    David McBride, Plant Operator
    Firestone Polymers
    Sulphur, LA
    ------------------------------



  • 279.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-23-2022 15:08
    So glad that you are taking care.   My heart situation is different thsn yours; yet i can bond with you over the goals for getting healthy. Since my open heart surgery with complications in 2012, aged 62, i am the proud grandmother of 6 children: 3 were born after my surgery ( no one needed to be named in my memory)

    ------------------------------
    Marilyn Rosenhouse
    Dallas Tx
    ------------------------------



  • 280.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-23-2022 16:48
    Hi group!

    I’m Susan Perez and I’ve had 2 surgeries to remove a large (6 cm) thoracic aortic aneurysm. The first surgery was the most complicated. It involved the top of the aorta which had to be removed and replaced with a mesh graft. The surgery was successful, but I had difficulty breathing and had to be placed on a ventilator 3 times. I was in ICU for 3 weeks and the step down unit for 1 week before I was released on Thanksgiving Day 2017. I had to go to rehab to work with a Speech Pathologist because I wasn’t able to swallow and I still had a feeding tube. Finally, after 2 weeks I passed the swallowing evaluation and I could go home.
    The next surgery was in May of 2018 and was done by the endovascular route to connect a stent graft to the previous mesh graft. That was a shorter hospital stay-2 weeks! I still have an aneurysm in the descending section of my aorta, but it’s being watched at this time, because it’s 4.8 cm and they don’t operate until they are 5.5 cm.
    I am so grateful to God for the surgeons I had at the best hospital for heart surgery in the country!

    Sent from my iPhone Susan J Perez




  • 281.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-24-2022 09:48
    Hello Fellow Survivors!
    I had quadruple bypass March 31th this year but stents over 25 years ago and worried about my heart and diabetes since then. I had many emergency visits to the hospital foreshadowing all this.
    It is now two months out, I am going to cardiac rehab, on new diabetes meds and feeling great. Blood pressure and sugars near normal.
    All your pains and worries will go away! It  did for me and everyone else here. 
    Please pray or ask people to pray for your healing. Believe in God's mercy. Ask for help even if you think you are unworthy. I did . 
    That's why I use the old James Bond movie meme. I live only three times with God's help.
    Peace and Love.

    --
    Mahalo E Ke Akua No Keia La ~ Thanks be to God for this day!
     
    Peace begins with me.

    Godwin Wong







  • 282.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 05-31-2022 09:52
    Hi, 
    I had a heart attack (blocked left coronary artery) on April 20 which led to a stent and a pacemaker on April 24. 
    So just beginning to learn all about my new circumstances. My daughter tipped me off to the group and I am looking forward to learning and participating.
    John
    Seattle, WA
    (803) 727-6774

    ------------------------------
    John Holton
    Seattle WA
    ------------------------------



  • 283.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-24-2022 16:56
    I just turned 30 years old. I had been having shortness of breath and chest pain for several weeks, and I was misdiagnosed with acid reflux and anxiety. I fought and fought because I knew this wasn't right. I went to another doctor, who believed my symptoms, completed bloodwork, and sent me to the ER. They found the root of the problem, a 98% blocked artery. I was told I had a heart attack, and I received a stent. I'm having a hard time coping with the new depression/anxiety. I have a lot of guilt, thinking my habits probably caused this, and scared it will happen again. I'm ok with all of the lifestyle changes I need to make, but I am having a hard time seeing a positive future.

    ------------------------------
    Irene Moreno
    CRESCENT CITY
    ------------------------------



  • 284.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-24-2022 16:56

    I'm 30 years old. I had shortness of breath and chest pain for weeks. I had gone to the ER and a doctor and was told it was acid reflux and/or anxiety. I fought and fought because I knew this wasn't right. I went to another doctor who believed my symptoms, completed bloodwork, and sent me to the ER. I was told I had a heart attack and I received a stent to correct the 98% blockage. I'm having a lot of depression/anxiety. It was traumatic to be told so many times that my symptoms were not real or that they were not severe enough. Told so many times that there were no available doctor appointments for several weeks or months. I feel guilty that I probably caused this with my lifestyle. I'm scared it will happen again. I'm worried about what this means for my life expectancy.



    ------------------------------
    Irene Moreno
    CRESCENT CITY
    ------------------------------



  • 285.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-25-2022 09:51
    Hi Irene,

    Welcome to our group.  First of all, you didn't cause this so you can stop feeling guilty.  You are a 30 year old female that had a heart attack.  I don't care what kind of lifestyle you've lived. Thirty year old females do not normally have 98% blockages of coronary arteries, heart attacks and stents.  You just had incredibly bad luck for one reason or another, including possibly a family history of heart disease, but it is not your fault.  I had a heart attack 4 1/2 years ago at age 67 and, though I was much older than you, male, lived a high stress life as a big firm lawyer, it wasn't my fault either as I also was a lifelong athlete and gym rate and everyone that knew me was stunned that I could have had a heart attack.  Of course, they didn't realize that my father had a heart attack at the identical age (he subsequently died of Alzheimer's at age 92, never having another heart attack), and my two uncles and one female cousin (16 years younger than me) also have/had heart disease.  Believe me, after I was released from the hospital, I would observe all the overweight obviously sedentary elderly people on the street and think, "look at them, I bet they haven't had coronary artery bypass surgery like Ira the athlete here."  

    I suppose I could have lived a macrobiotic, off the grid lifestyle but, as my old doctor once said, "you have to live." Sometimes bad things happen and you have to accept it and either not blame yourself or else forgive yourself.  Bottom line is that you are no more at fault than my sweet, beautiful mother was at fault when she died of metastatic breast cancer at age 59 or my beautiful, brilliant high school friend and classmate was was she died of kidney cancer at age 39 (a disease that usually strikes overweight guys in their 60's).

    I certainly understand your frustration with the doctors who misdiagnosed you, but I expect that heart disease was the last thing they expected when you walked into their offices.  It doesn't excuse them missing something that could have killed you, but it does help explain their huge errors in judgment.

    As for what happens next, nobody has any guarantees but, now that you know that you have coronary artery disease, modern day cardiology has worked miracles.  As long as you keep your regular cardiologist visits, take whatever medications are prescribed for you (I take a statin, blood pressure medication and a baby aspirin daily), maintain a reasonably healthy diet and exercise, there is no reason why you need to have another heart attack or why you shouldn't have a normal life expectancy.

    Stay active on this forum, join a local Mended Hearts chapter, maybe become a Mended Hearts visitor who speaks with other heart patients and their families, see a therapist if necessary to deal with your depression and anxiety (totally normal for new heart patients).  I recommend meditation, which I have been doing since I was your age.

    Finally, you survived!!!  Smell the roses!  Feel the rain on tour face, no one can feel it for you (Alanis Morrisette).  As for me, I feel this deep gratitude for the past 4 1/2 years, to all the people that saves my life and for letting me live a while longer on this big beautiful Earth.

    Good luck to you and stay in touch with the folks on this forum.  You'll learn a lot and I think feel a lot better.

    Ira


    ------------------------------
    Ira Reid
    Hoboken NJ
    ------------------------------



  • 286.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 07-25-2022 10:13
    It's been a little over a year since I had my heart attack.  No major blockage.  A small artery with blockage and treated with a stent.  As far as anxiety after your ordeal, I very much had PTSD for about two months after my diagnosis.  I was also diagnosed with Afib and heart failure.  And can echo the fact that I pretty much led a healthy lifestyle.  But one thing that is just as harmful to your heart health as diet and exercise is stress.  We have to keep that in check.  One cardiologist said my heart attack was stress induced.  I enjoy hearing from Ira as he is a great inspiration.  And as a side note, I have a family history of heart disease whereas my dad had a massive heart attack at age 62 and passed away.  So best of luck to everyone on their journey to live their best life with heart disease.

    ------------------------------
    Clara Spiegel
    VA
    ------------------------------



  • 287.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-07-2022 00:57
    Dear Irene
    Please take heart( pun intended haha) from all the wonderful advice that Ira has given you . I am approaching my 10 year “ heartaversary” .

    Marilyn B. Rosenhouse
    Mobile: (214)850-0655




  • 288.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-24-2022 13:52
    Hello!

    I am 27, just finished my second valve replacement two months ago. Both times I got very, very sick due to some kind of heart defect. I did not keep up with the exercise after replacement #1 - not sure if that was because of the sickness or the cause of it. Anyways, this time I'm trying really hard to keep up with everything - working out, eating well, etc. The staff at Baylor is very very nice but I hope to not seem them again for another several decades... lol.

    Anyways I'd be very interested in hearing from other people about their experiences. Sometimes I feel like I'm just going to keel over and die at any moment, so the fear is definitely very real.


    ------------------------------
    Joshua Blunt
    ------------------------------



  • 289.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 08-24-2022 14:12
    Hi Joshua and welcome to the community! 
    Heart problems and procedures are often accompanied by anxiety and depression.  These can and do cause physiological problems and its easy to confuse those symptoms with the heart problem itself rather then with the anxiety or depression.  I don't know enough to say what is going on in your case but I urge you to get some help.  Independent with whether the problem is heart related or anxiety related, treatments are available.  Your PCP should be a good starting point for anxiety and depression issues and your cardiologist, for heart issues.  I was affected by some pretty serious panic type anxieties before my surgery and these had serious physiological symptoms that could be confused with my heart issue.  It's important to get some help with this no matter the source of the problem!

    ------------------------------
    Ed M
    ------------------------------



  • 290.  RE: Welcome! Introduce yourself!

    Posted 09-12-2022 08:53
    Hello Andrea.  Hope all is well.  56 year old male born with tof. Had three open heart surgery,  recent in 2021 to put a pulmonary valve and a MAZE.  I had it done at children hospital in lasvegas.  Sunrise hospital.  I do have to admit it was tough.  One year in feeling stronger.  What every you do don't ever give up.  Your son was born with a tough problem but God will never let him give up.

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    jack arnett
    las vegas NV
    ------------------------------