High Coronary Calcium Score: How do others feel emotionally?
I have a calcium score of 1,950 which is extremely high which means I am at a very high risk for a cardiac event,heart attack,stroke or sudden death.
I take a statin and baby aspirin. I have never been sick, have excellent cholesterol, low blood pressure and I am not overweight. I have no other health problems and I have never been sick. But I feel like a walking time bomb which has caused me a lot of stress. I am 70 yrs old.
I wonder how others with this condition feel emotionally?
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The paradox is that there is some evidence that statins and BP control may actually INCREASE the CAC score but also IMPROVE cardiac risk. It may be that they change the pattern of calcification to STABILISE the plaques. This is still a matter of research But don't worry. Please see my serenity prayer in my posting
I find this very interesting although I don’t claim to understand the link you sent. What I do know is that my BP was too high initially for the scan so they gave me a beta blocker and then I went into the tube. I have slight claustrophobia but generally tolerate these types of test although not easily. I wonder if that could increase my calcium score. Is that what you think?
My basic understanding is that CAC scoring can be accomplished with normal or even elevated heart rate as the scanning device and computer are simply counting - no "imaging."
A CT Angiogram (CT A) is to provide imaging so requires a very still heart, so most folks are given metoprolol to slow their heart rate down.
The CT scanner is spinning, a person's heart is beating. It least in 2017, it would seem that some manufacturers of CT scanners (two out of the four tested) were creating errors of up to 50% at only 75 bpm. There was no testing past that point (errors at even higher rates). For me, my heart was readily up at 110-120 BPM, because like you, I hate being in a tube! hee hee hee
There is a body of math (Fourier) that can compensate for some motion blur, but it is not infinite. It sure would be nice of the FDA to make the manufactures certify that their CT scanners are artifact free up to a certain heart rate, and currently that is not the case.
Back in the day, when I designed, built and installed a bi-axial cardiac visualization system to image baboon hearts in motion, it required filming (yes, real film) at 400 frames per SECOND to create motion free filming of the high speed fluoroscopes used in each axis. Even then, the baboon hearts had metal markers attached to the surface of the heart to have exact registration for the motion study of heart walls.
We have much cooler stuff available now to image hearts, but from my experience I have an intuitive thought about how heart rate affects imaging. And thanks to this forum has revealed, there sure appear to be a lot of folks with monster heart scores and more healthier hearts than not. I hope I am one of them!
In any regard, I will have to be checked out by thorough imaging, and likely intra vascular. My guess is that there will be a "project" to attend to, but I am doubtful that it will be to the extent given by my CAC score.
By the way, I am grateful for all the kind responses over the weekend to my story. As this forum opened, it is an emotional journey.
Well....
Mayo Scottsdale is full up in cardiology and will not add me.
So....
I guess it's Cleveland.
That will make for some long travel past the virtual second opinion process.
sigh
Pete
I'll be going to a new cardiologist this coming Friday and hope he is one that connects with patients. I have learned a lot since reading everyone in this forum, reading and listening to friends (some of the friends want to play doctor and keep pushing me to get stents mainly because their husbands had heart bypass surgery, they say I am ahead of the game...). I want to have the nuke, stress and EKG tests to see how my heart is doing but at the end of the day it comes down to "to stent or not to stent". If I do decide to go through an angiogram then there is not much to say. At that moment the doctor will ask me if I want the stents. Stents will reassure that my arteries will allow blood to flow with no problem. So it is a huge decision. I read many had higher calcium scores and pretty much managed to have a normal life without stents. But wouldn't one want to close this chapter of uncertainty -with stents- for a better tomorrow? Maybe my "doctor" friends are right and I live in denial....
Remember a stent is for a blockage of 70% or more. It’s no guarantee to prevent other issues. High calc does not mean automatically you need a stent. Father in law and mother in law have cac of 1000+ and 4000+ and no issue. Everyone is different…I wish you well.
alaskat,
Stents are used when needed - to know they are needed typically requires a test/scan, a catheterization, or a symptom then catheterization to confirm blockage.
Stents are not often placed preemptively - as they may not be needed.
Good advice from the previous two replies. I personally would never get invasive surgery unless I’m told there’s no choice. I have a relatively high Calcium score but did tests where the cardiologist says the blood flow is very good. I’m going with that…we never discussed a stent just so you know. But, yes, everyone is different.
So if I have high calcium score how does one go to find out is the blood flow is good? Is an angiogram then a necessary path to find out if I have a high percentage blockage on a specific artery. My CAC test indicates there are two arteries with 625 each and one with 250 which pretty much gets all of them to 1525 index.
May I ask what was your calcium score. I understand that all is not the same for each individual. I appreciate your responses.