Last week I had the misfortune to have what I have been led
to believe was a small myocardial infarction, which I am happy to report I have
apparently survived.
In true doctor fashion I had been ignoring some minor chest
discomfort until last Sunday week when a doctor friend insisted I go an be
assessed at the local teaching hospital (RNSH) at which I had worked decades
ago. My, have things changed!
Once I confessed to the emergency doctor that I had some
chest discomfort things rolled on fast.
From 6:30pm to 7:30 I was examined, blood tests done and some
potent analgesics were given while a cardiograph was done and assessed. – till now
much as I expected might happen.
Then things ramped up a notch as I swiftly found myself in a
catheter lab surrounded by huge TV screens as various lines were inserted into arteries
and veins, and a team of experts assembled. (In the dark, surrounded by screens, the staff looked quite ghost-like!)
Despite the powerful ‘happy juice’ I recognised the screens
were now filled with images of my heart and my coronary arteries – with the
right one being apparently blocked part way down.
No worries – soon artery was dilated and a stent (tiny tube) was put
where the block has been.
More pictures to ensure all of the heart was now supplied with blood.
An hour later (9:30) back in my more comfortable bed – the others in
the cath are bloody hard – and very comfortable with no chest pain and the
knowledge that all of my heart now has plenty of blood to keep on pumping with!
48 hours later I has kicked out of hospital, with some new tablets, to check in with
my cardiologist in 4-6 weeks and to stay in touch with my GP!
So here I type to you – gentle reader – amazed at the tech
in the catheter lab, the catheters and the stents – all of which are so new and so powerful
in the hands of our experts we are really lucky. We all know just how much work has gone into developing
all this and proving it up, but I reckon it was worth it.
All this ignores the amazing advances I witnessed during my stay in the use of ultrasound to image almost anything from eyes to prostates - just saying nothing of MRI and all the other innovations!
Well, I for one, is grateful, as is my 75 year old ticker, for all these advances!
They all really seem to work and keep us going! (I remember the days when the "heart attack" was 2 weeks rest and 2 weeks light duties! - times have really changed.)
Thanks to all for the apparent miracles!
David.