Eye issues after aortic surgery

Posted by texasdeb @texasdeb, Oct 15, 2023

I had thoracic aortic surgery June 1, 2023. Since then I have had a few Eye related issues that are concerning some I believe are ocular migraines and fit all the symptoms like silver ribbons on the sides of my vision or bright blind spots. These GI away within a few minutes.
But I have had Uncontrollable eye movements that only last a few seconds but scare me. This has happened about 4 times since my surgery.
I told my surgeon, cardiologist and my PCP and they act like this is new to them. But then I researched online and there is a lot of documentation of our issues after surgery.
Are my docs just not wanting to deal with my issues. Very frustrating.
Please let me know if anyone has had these problems and how you felt with it. I went back to work 3 months after surgery and have a very stressful job
In a Hospital Laboratory as a supervisor.

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@keke73 I understand why you are overwhelmed. A Stanford Type A aortic dissection is not something a patient should be left to figure out alone. I survived a Type A aortic dissection in 2015 and had emergency open-heart surgery with a Dacron graft. After something that serious, blood pressure control, chest pain, back pain, headaches, vision changes, and any unusual fluid from the nose need clear answers from the treating doctors. A blood pressure of 174/94 with sharp chest and back pain after a Type A dissection history is not something I would personally ignore. I would want a cardiothoracic surgeon, cardiologist, or aortic specialist to review the imaging, the repair, the medications, and the current symptoms.

I would call the doctor’s office and schedule a follow-up appointment specifically to get a clear understanding of what the doctor expects going forward. I would ask them to explain the blood pressure plan, the medication plan, the imaging results, the aorta measurements, and what symptoms require urgent care. I would also bring a written list of concerns so nothing gets missed. You deserve a direct explanation of what was repaired, what remains dissected if anything, what your aorta measures now, what blood pressure target they want, why you are on that dose of metoprolol, and what symptoms mean emergency care. You are right that patients should be told the truth. Not vague answers. Not dismissal. Clear facts. Peace.

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@moonboy I had a Pseudoaneurysm of aortic arch. I figure was corrected. Now a Standford Type A aortic dissection. Which is not the same. Bp was high before surgery. I have no understanding how I got this. I don't know if my body can with stand another surgery my belief it took them longer then expected to revive me. Which we have some of the symptoms we have even from the bypass. I will see him Wednesday and I will try not to be so emotional. I just need answers and the truth.
Thank you , you given me a lot to think about. Not just that I have a non union dishence need I say more.
My life

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