New diagnosis of ascending aortic aneurysm and I’m terrified
I received the diagnosis of a 4.1 CM ascending aortic aneurysm as an incidental finding after an angiogram was ordered to make sure I had no blockages due to an unexpected spike and blood pressure at work. I normally have low blood pressure so I was surprised when it was 189/111 and they took me to the hospital. that seem to come from acute stress at work, but I had a complete cardiac workout after finding a very low amount of troponin in my bloodstream 0.03. Anyway, the aneurysm was a complete shock and now I’m terrified that it’s going to burst at any time despite my cardiologist rather nonchalant approach. I asked if there’s anything I should be doing or not doing and she said don’t lift anything over 40 pounds . But no other instructions other than they’ll keep an eye on things. How do you get past feeling like your life is almost over. I’m 67 years old and in good health otherwise. I eat healthy, not overweight and thought based on my family longevity that I would live into my late 80s early 90s. Now I’m afraid I won’t make it till the end of the year which is probably ridiculous but this aneurysm has me totally freaked out. How do you all cope? And how do you get the fear so you can just enjoy life?
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Hello, thank you for sharing your experience! It gives me hope! I’m happy to hear you are doing well at 79 and have the surgery behind you. Can you tell me if yours was 4.8 when it was discovered or when it was operated on? Monitoring for 14 years seems like a great long time! I’m just newly diagnosed at 3.9 cm and I just turned 52 years old, female. The future looks scary to me from here I’ll be honest. 🙁
I’m sorry to hear about your cancer diagnosis. I hope all goes well for you with that. You bring up a great point about worrying about one thing just bc you know and then it could be something else that comes up that presents a threat. I’ll try to keep that in mind. Do you mind if I ask how old you were when you first found out about the aneurysm and what size it was at discovery. I’m 52 female and just found a 3.9 cm ascending aorta. No idea how long I’ve had it… only other test was an echocardiogram that measured it at 3.74 cm and no doctor even mentioned it to me at all. Just read it going through my old records. Thanks for your reply and wishing you good health!
Just wanted to drop in and wish you a successful surgery and recovery.. I am sure you will be glad to have this behind you in a few days. Hoping it goes as smooth as can possibly be for you!
Thank you! Excited and nervous. At least this one will be planned. I had a heart catheter yesterday and all went well. No blockages. What a long strange year it’s been.
Hi Donna, happy to hear yours has been very slow growing and it’s possible yours is closer to upper limits of normal for your age.. I saw a formula that calculates the upper limits of normal by age D = age x .16 + 31
If it’s true then the upper limit of normal at 79 is 4.36 cm. Do you mind sharing what BP medication you take? Have you been on it since you found out about the aneurysm? I’ve heard that BP medication can help slow progression in some cases. Thinking about asking my dr. I found out about mine on a CT scan a couple weeks ago at 3.9 cm. I’m 52, female. Had an echocardiogram 2 years ago that mentioned my ascending aorta at 3.74 cm. I’m wondering if I’ve had growth or could it be just a difference between types of scans and methods of measuring. Thank you and wishing you good health!
That’s great news… do you mind my asking where you’ll be having the surgery? You may have said it somewhere in the comments already… hope you’re back on your feet in no time and can enjoy the holidays!
Oh, that's interesting. My cardio seems pretty much unconcerned about the aneurysm but does assure I am not lifting more than 25 lbs, which I am not.
I am taking Losartan, 50 mgs and Metoprolol succ, 25 mgs. For a long time I was just taking the losartan at 25 mgs but as I aged, I am sure my arteries have become more calcified and my blood pressure needed more control. This combo keeps my blood pressure usually below 120/80. I think I was started on the meds before the aneurysm was seen.
You are right, different testing will yield different sizes for an aneurysm. One measures straight across and one measures on a diagonal and I can't remember which is which, echo or CT. I get the echo every 6 months and now swapped out the CT for an MRI every two years.
I wish you good luck with controlling the growth of your aneurysm. I guess it is the lifting that can cause the bulge to grow.
I’m having it done at Emory in Atlanta with the same surgeon who did my emergency Triple A back in February when he saved my life the first time. I’m glad things happened the way they did with this result. I didn’t have to search out a clinic or doctor and I didn’t have anytime to google the surgery.
I definitely think it’s comforting to be with a surgeon who has operated on you before that you have confidence in.. that’s important and sounds like you’re in great hands! Wishing you the best results and speedy healing!
I am 66 years old now, but was diagnosed at 65 with a 5.4cm aneurysm. Before that, I was running, biking and hiking in the Rockies.... not for the faint of heart! If you are at 3.9cm now, it seems to me you just need to monitor the rate of growth with regular echo's and stay (or get into) shape. I would not worry... just monitor it and stay in shape... it will help with the recovery.