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Re: [OM] (OT) Down the rabbit hold

Subject: Re: [OM] (OT) Down the rabbit hold
From: John Hermanson <omtech1@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 17 Jun 2010 08:33:05 -0400
Hey I'm glad that went well for you.  I've had 3 angiagrams since 1990 
and 3 stents installed.  Last stent went in 14 years ago.  Enjoy every 
sandwich (to quote Warren Zevon who unfortunately avoided doctors at all 
costs).
___________________________________
John Hermanson  |   CPS, Inc.
21 South Ln., Huntington NY 11743
631-424-2121  |  www.zuiko.com
Olympus OM Service since 1977
Gallery: www.zuiko.com/album/index.html


Bob Whitmire wrote:
> Well, this past Saturday morning, like Alice, I tumbled down the  
> rabbit hole. Chest pains, sweats and such. Doc said go to the ER. Off  
> I went. Tests at local hospital didn't show anything conclusive, but  
> the hospitalist told me I should stay in the hospital until Monday  
> morning and then do a stress test. Come Monday morning I did the new  
> and improved nuclear medicine stress test, and apparently passed with  
> flying colors. Proud to say, I went the distance, nothing obvious  
> showed up, and the doc said I had the exercise capacity of a health 60- 
> year-old man. WoooHooo!
> 
> However (you knew that was coming, didn't you).
> 
> The stress test results are sent to cardiology at Maine Med in  
> Portland, which apparently is one of the country's top heart  
> hospitals. The hospitalist showed up in my room to tell me they "found  
> something" that appeared to be an occlusion in the lower quadrant of  
> the heart. The cardiologist's best guess was a 70 percent chance of  
> blockage. Most of you know what that means: cardiac catheterization.
> 
> That damned rabbit hole got deep quickly. Before dark I was in an  
> ambulance headed for Maine Med.
> 
> Cardiac unit, Maine Med. Cardiologist came around to talk about the  
> procedure, scheduled for noon Tuesday. He said based on his reading he  
> was not really expecting to find anything. Turns out stress tests are  
> highly reliable if they're normal, but not so much if they are  
> abnormal. Too much stuff in the body to occlude the images. So,  
> despite having a roommate from Hell (too long a story to tell here), I  
> survived until Tuesday. Note they didn't let me eat anything from  
> supper Monday night at Miles until a very late lunch on Tuesday at  
> Maine Med.
> 
> The procedure was a breeze. Very cool. Some of you may already have  
> had it done. I was fully conscious. While I was still on the table,  
> the cardiologist stuck his head around the camera and told me he hoped  
> his own heart looked as good. So they cut me loose after making me lie  
> on my back for four hours. Right after the procedure, a nurse had to  
> apply pressure to the entry site (the groin) for about twenty minutes.  
> Hard pressure. I told her I hoped they were paying her a lot of money.
> 
> I couldn't tell whether the camera they used was an Olympus.
> 
> So now I'm back in place, with orders to take it easy for a few days.
> 
> That shouldn't be hard.
> 
> --Bob Whitmire
> www.bobwhitmire.com
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
-- 
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