Jump to content

iisrbleu

Members
  • Posts

    4
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by iisrbleu

  1. My husband had a stress test about 14 months before he died and it came out fine.  That is why he death was such a shock.  This will have to be one of those thing that I can not beat myself up for but will have to advocate for change in our medical system.  Not sure I will be able to watch the move

     

    The link to the article didn't work. 

     

    My husband passed away from the dreaded "widow maker" heart attack in his sleep.  His father died of the same heart attack. Three months before his passing he went to the doctor for a check up.  Everything was fine, even his blood work.  My husband was kind of passive and most likely didn't remind the doctor of his family history.  Someone that works in cardiac medicine said if they did a stress test on him they would have detected the problem.  Sure wish that was done.  I never heard about the calcium deposits.  I will have to read up on that.

  2. Not sure why the link did not work but here is the article

     

    If your doctor sees calcium, he knows you have heart disease

    By Nancy Szokan March 9

     

    Physicians have long recognized that factors including weight, age, lifestyle and

    cholesterol levels can affect patients? risk of heart disease. But as narrator Gillian

    Anderson repeats several times in the new documentary ?The Widowmaker,? about 4

    million Americans with no symptoms and none of the common risk factors have died of

    unanticipated heart attacks in the past three decades.

     

    Written and directed by Patrick Forbes, ?Widowmaker? makes the case that many of those

    lives could have been saved if doctors employed a long?ignored, still?underused

    procedure: the coronary artery scan, a sort of mammogram of the heart that identifies

    calcium deposits. ?If you find calcium, you know you?ve got [heart] disease,? one doctor

    says. With such information, a symptom?free patient can be put on a

    diet/exercise/lifestyle regimen before disaster strikes.

     

    More than 30 years elapsed after the scan?s invention in 1981 before it was accepted as

    ?beneficial? by the American Heart Association. The film blames the delay on the

    recalcitrance of doctors, hospitals and insurers ? many of whom were eager to take a

    different route: the ?highly profitable? use of stents, inserted via catheter, into the blocked

    arteries of heart patients. But that operation usually takes place only after a heart attack or

    other traumatic event makes the patient?s disease apparent. That wouldn?t have helped

    those 4 million asymptomatic heart attack victims.

     

    Interspersed with emotional recollections from people who lost family members to

    sudden heart attacks and audio clips of terrified 911 calls, the movie is unabashedly on the

    side of the scan advocates (who call themselves ?the calcium club?). The film recently

    debuted in theaters in New York and Los Angeles, and is available from iTunes, Amazon

    Instant and other sources

     

  3. 4 years later and something just gave bring you right back to the early days.  I was reading the newspaper while waiting in the school pickup line and come across this article:

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/if-your-doctor-sees-calcium-he-knows-you-have-heart-disease/2015/03/09/b04ee508-b789-11e4-9423-f3d0a1e

    c335c_story.html

     

    It was like someone punched me hard.  My husband just dropped dead dead from a heart attack.  Just like that.  No prior heart problems, in good health, height / weight proportional, did all the things you are supposed to do.  Just had a massive heart attack.  Just like that.  The ER doctor said that is the way it usually happens - not a long battle with heart disease - you just have a heart attack and die.

     

    "Widowmaker? makes the case that many of those lives could have been saved if doctors employed a long-ignored, still-underused procedure: the coronary artery scan, a sort of mammogram of the heart that identifies calcium deposits. ?If you find calcium, you know you?ve got [heart] disease,? one doctor says. With such information, a symptom-free patient can be put on a diet/exercise/lifestyle regimen before disaster strikes.

     

    If the above procedure was done, my husband might still be alive.

     

    Just another thing to ponder.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.