Thank you for taking my questions.
This post is for my father. 54, smoker, current
cholesterolCholesterol
Cholesterol and diet
Cholesterol producers
Cholesterol test
Coronary risk profile
High blood cholesterol and triglycerides 385 & triglyc 350. Four bypasses 1997.
FamilyBirth control and family planning
Choosing a primary care provider
Ewing’s sarcoma
Family troubles - resources history early onset
CADCoronary heart disease. False-negatives on stress tests. Handful of meds for
CADCoronary heart disease & Chrons. Cath on 5/19 revealed 3 new
blockagesPeripheral artery disease; 80, 80, 90%. He also has an
aorticAbdominal aortic aneurysm
Aortic aneurysm
Aortic angiography
Aortic arch syndrome
Aortic dissection
Aortic insufficiency
Aortic rupture, chest x-ray
Aortic stenosis
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Thoracic aortic aneurysm aneurysm (new) and something about renal artery blockage (new). Primary symptom is transient shortness of breath that I’d consider severe.
He must choose 3 stents or bypass surgery. His first bypass surgery was emergency because the stent perforated his artery due to weakening from years of Prednisone therapy for Chrons Disease. Needless to say, this is a tough call.
Q1: Can you explain what the aortic aneurysm and renal artery blockage are, what they mean to the general prognosis and what they say of the CAD progression?
Q2: What are the risks of a second bypass surgery versus stenting weakened vessels? In your *personal opinion*, which route would you go with a patient with his history?
Q3: They plan to insert the 3 stents and 3 different times. Why on earth wouldn’t they do all of them at once?
Q4: I’ve heard that grafts last 12 years under good circumstances, much less in smokers. With such severe occlusion and high lipids, what sort of prognosis are we looking at?
I wish desperately that he could go to CCF, but his insurance won’t allow.
Bless you doctors for the generous donation of your time to this wonderful forum.