← Return to Mild cardiomegaly?
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Heart & Blood Health | Last Active: Oct 31 11:05pm | Replies (5)
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Replies to "Thanks for your reply. It makes sense. FWIW, I haven't noticed a significant arrhythmia. I get..."
The waiting AND the uncertainty cause anxiety for almost all of us.
About blockages, 50% ain't great, but it's not bad, especially if you're north of about 65 or so. My own father was about to have a hip replacement when workups showed he was 100% blocked in his right carotid (in the side of the neck, feeding the brain), and 90% blocked on the other side. The wouldn't perform the hip replacement until he'd had a vein stripped from his ankle and sewn into the left side as a bypass measure. She, Dr. Ginting, the vascular surgeon, said she wouldn't even try to bypass the right side....it was a goner.
The one artery that you don't want occluded more than about 60% (and not be on a remedial measure of some kind, statins, heart surgery for bypass...whatever they come up with) is the Left Anterior Descending, or LAD. That's the widow maker, or so they call it because so many men succumb to that blockage. Your occlusions are unknown to me, perhaps not to you.
You say you have the odd flutter. That can be: bowel gas (transverse colon runs high tucked up under the diaphragm, or it can be palpitations, which is usually a signal that you have atrial fibrillation. Flutter is very difficult to detect for most 'wearers', and it tends to stay in place once it develops. AF begets AF, so it's considered a progressive disorder. It almost always gets worse over time, sometimes evolving over just a couple of weeks. So, the wisdom is to get a Holter or Loop recorder in place, maybe for a whole week, hopefully a length that might catch an arrythmia if it exists, and get a record and a definitive diagnosis. From there, a good EP will have you on his/her roster and you could be ablated in as little as 10 days, although two months might be more realistic for the better EPs.