D
davidfortune
Well,
I guess I'm one of the 2 in 10,000.....
Short Version:
I ended up back at Presbyterian Dallas due to Cardiac Tamponade (i.e. compression of the heart due to accumulation of fluid within the pericardial sack and the resultant pressure on the heart). Spent 25 hours from check-in to check-out, had a Pericardiocentesis procedure (i.e. long needle up under the rib cage into the pericardum to drain the fluid and a catheter placed to drain overnight).
They drained 990 ml of fluid from around my heart. Interesting procedure... They gave me versed but apparently not as much as I wanted since I was aware of most of the procedure and conversing with the medical team (bad luck for them I guess... ).
Back home next day (yesterday afternoon), breathing easier, glad to be home again and encouraged that cardio says this virtually never occurs twice to the same person.
He did say he thinks it is an immune response due to a "hyped up" immune system. He says he never sees it in older people so he thinks it is related to a more aggressive immune system in younger people, although nobody knows for sure why it occurs.
So - I chose the big, hunkin needle since they weren't excited about waiting to see if it got better. Cardio said intra-pericardial pressure was about 15 times the normal pressure which is not good.
Anyway - back home and walking my way healthy again.
David
I guess I'm one of the 2 in 10,000.....
Short Version:
I ended up back at Presbyterian Dallas due to Cardiac Tamponade (i.e. compression of the heart due to accumulation of fluid within the pericardial sack and the resultant pressure on the heart). Spent 25 hours from check-in to check-out, had a Pericardiocentesis procedure (i.e. long needle up under the rib cage into the pericardum to drain the fluid and a catheter placed to drain overnight).
They drained 990 ml of fluid from around my heart. Interesting procedure... They gave me versed but apparently not as much as I wanted since I was aware of most of the procedure and conversing with the medical team (bad luck for them I guess... ).
Back home next day (yesterday afternoon), breathing easier, glad to be home again and encouraged that cardio says this virtually never occurs twice to the same person.
He did say he thinks it is an immune response due to a "hyped up" immune system. He says he never sees it in older people so he thinks it is related to a more aggressive immune system in younger people, although nobody knows for sure why it occurs.
So - I chose the big, hunkin needle since they weren't excited about waiting to see if it got better. Cardio said intra-pericardial pressure was about 15 times the normal pressure which is not good.
Anyway - back home and walking my way healthy again.
David