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#212749 - 10/19/06 09:38 AM
OT - NEED HELP with simple health questions
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 2206
Loc: Louisiana, USA
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I got a problem and it's very disappointing. Diagnosed with heart disease January 25, I had a stent procedure. Sixty grand and it didn't work. (Or I've plugged up another artery.) Here's what a stent looks like. I'm plugging up again. Went to ER two weeks ago. Now on a more aggressive therapy. Added blood pressure med now, I'm on a more strict diet and I am taking several supplements. (Think alternative medicine.) I hope I can reverse this. They want to do another catheterization and it is scheduled for December 27. Heck, I'll be dead or fixed by then. Plus, I don't want to do it if at all possible. I will if I have to. But I want to try to reverse it. (Some research shows you can.) If I have to have coronary bypass surgery, that could cost a quarter of a million dollars! And I have no insurance. I guess the state hospital would do it. But maybe I can reverse it. My questions: 1. Do you know anyone who has had a stent put in? Have they had no problems again and if so, how long ago was the stent procedure? If they have had problems again, what did they do? Another stent? Coronary bypass surgery? Alternative medicine treatment? (Hey, call your friend if you don't know! S/he probably would like to hear from you anyway!) 2. Do you know anyone who has had coronary bypass surgery? (Same questions as above.) Thanks for responding. This will give me an informal feel for how many people have further problems. I read one place where it said that 10% of people with stents plug up again. Another book I read said it's 30-40%. My informal asking around is running higher than that. The docs don't tell you that! And now there is a controversy over whether drug-coated stents (like mine), which were supposed to be BETTER than uncoated stents are actually WORSE. I realize that a stent is a patch and does not cure heart disease. I have done pretty well this year with lifestyle changes but now, they must be radical if I am to beat this. ::: Please think of people in your life who have had stents or bypass and let me know if they have had to have another stent or bypass surgery. P.S. Also, if you know of anyone who decided against stent / bypass surgery and chose something else, what was it and how did they do? ------------------ Bill Yamaha PSR2000 [This message has been edited by SemiLiveMusic (edited 10-19-2006).]
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~ ~ ~ Bill
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#212751 - 10/19/06 12:13 PM
Re: OT - NEED HELP with simple health questions
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 2206
Loc: Louisiana, USA
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Originally posted by DonM: Bill, sorry to hear about the complications. Email Gary Diamond, he knows a LOT about this stuff. Okay, but that's not what I asked. I wasn't seeking advice, although I enjoy reading all comments. Or maybe you're saying he might know some real world numbers. I simply wanted people to tell if they know anyone who has had a stent or bypass and how have they done. Like you know Hank's wife. She had a stent put it, a few months later, had to do it again, months later, she had to have bypass surgery. I know another lady who had a stent and months later, it plugged up and she had to have bypass. My dad had bypass, six years later, bypass again, and a few years after that, a stroke. I know two men who have had stents and no problems but they have only had them in a couple of years. There are some alternative medicine docs who say stents and bypass surgery flat out are not worth it except in a small percentage of cases where they must be done. And one of the biggest money machines ever built. Much of mainstream medicine promotes stents / bypass as routine and the only options. I'm hoping to get a decent amount of responses from this forum and another forum so I can get more real world examples. Know anyone else other than Mrs. Hank? ------------------ Bill Yamaha PSR2000 [This message has been edited by SemiLiveMusic (edited 10-19-2006).]
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~ ~ ~ Bill
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#212753 - 10/19/06 01:30 PM
Re: OT - NEED HELP with simple health questions
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Bill, The percentage of failures with stents is relatively low, particularly if the stent is the newer type that is medicated. The older stents were not medicated and required that the patient take blood thinners, some with nasty side effects, for the rest of the lives. The new ones allow the patient to take Plavix and aspirin, and in most instances the Plavix only has to be taken for 3 to 6 months, but the aspirins are forever. Stents are for those individuals with early onset of coronary artery disease and made it possible to open those blockages without cracking open their chest and doing major surgery. Bypass surgery, which essentially is a procedure where a piece of vein from the patient's leg, or the mamory artery, is installed in place of the blocked coronary artery. While the procedure has really improved over the past few decades, it's still major surgery. As for reversing the condition, that's really not possible. Most patients with significant coronary artery disease got that way from a high-fat, high-cholestoral, high-carbohydrate diet. You can change your eating habits and slow, and possibly stop any advancement of the condition, but nothing will reverse the damage and artery clogging that has taken place. Keep in mind that the artery clogging process takes lots of years, and once the arteries are narrowed down to where the blood cells have to line up in single file for the blood to flow to the heart muscle, a single, tiny clot could cause that flow to cease. This is why it's so important to stay on a regimen of aspirin, and Plavix if prescribed. The only way to determine if you have a blockage is cardiac catherization. While you can have a heart scan performed, the test is not all that accurate, especially in women. I should know. Just last week my wife had a stent put in here left, anterior decending coronary artery, a very important vessel that was 90 percent blocked. Ironically, we both had heart scans done in July and her scan report said her coronary arteries were completely open. Apparently, sometime between last October and this past September, when she had to get an EKG for a preoperative evaluation to have her knee replaced, she had a heart attack. Her regular doctor missed this entirely, and fortunately, the anesthesiologist picked it up the day before surgery. Had she undergone general anesthesia for the knee should could have went into cardiac arrest and died on the operating table. She's home now, went back to work just five days after the stent was put in place, and with luck she will be able to have the knee replaced in January. Hope this is of some help Bill, Gary ------------------ Travlin' Easy
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K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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