My wife just had wrist cath last Wednesday and 5 days later her arm started hurting. We went to ER today and they said it was a small clot that should desolve. Her arm hurts from her wrist all the way to her shoulder. She said it is severe pain.
My wife just had wrist cath last Wednesday and 5 days later her arm started hurting. We went to ER today and they said it was a small clot that should desolve. Her arm hurts from her wrist all the way to her shoulder. She said it is severe pain.
my husband had the wrist cath monday. went home after 3 hours. small discomfort. amazing compared to his 3 or 4 past groin caths. no big activity for 24 hours or lifting over 20 lbs 3 days.
my husband age 55with 4. stints and one heart attack previous had chest and jaw pain this past Wed night. Thurs. he "flunked" the stress test and tomorrow they will. cath thru wrist. I checked in here to see what might be next and will he be spending the night etc.
i have had a catherazation attempted thru my wrist and cardiologist after artery started spasaming he had to go thru groin ..... but when the wrist artery was attempted i have had nerve damage since then from the cath injection site all the way in my hand to my index finger its a painful electrical feeling in the area from the site to my index finger ..... so i prefer the groin area for the cath ....its been 10 days post cath and im still having alot of nerve pain and electrical sensation !!!!!
I had a Cath through the neck, doctors can cath you just about anywhere.
ANYONE EVER HAD A CATHERIZITION VIA THE WRIST AND THEN DEVELOP A TENDINITIS? OH YEAH AND WAKE UP 2 DAYS POST CATH AT HOME WITH BRUISING THE SIZE OF A FOOTBALL IN YOUR GROIN? HOW COME?
"Need highly competent team to prevent mistakes"
Even the best make mistakes. With medicine it takes so long to learn a subject in great detail and gain experience that the best are senile by then anyway (jk)
All humans are capable of mistakes obviously, no matter how qualified they are. I have been walking for over 45 years now, but I still occassionally trip up.
That is what the teaching hospital contends only qualified doctors, however, if one is under, the trainees will/may take turns on a certain procedure and tell you only the "doctors" (they are doctors) operated, but there actions are overseen by a qualified doctor . Do you go to a Barber College for a haircut? Some are better than others, I am told, but I wouldn't want the other.
A couple of decades a movie star by the name of Jeff Chandler had a fatal experience with his operation as medical personnel left a surgical tool in his body (wasn't in the US, overseas somewhere). Need highly competent team to prevent mistakes.
Just curious, do the doctors at your teaching hospital use pacemakers built by the cheapest bidder? Kind of a contradiction.........(jk)
In either case, it sounds like the wrist would be a much more comfortable procedure if there was a qualified individual to perform it.
What? lol
I was treated at Imperial Research College London and had other treatment at St. Mary's in London, renown worldwide as a teaching hospital. I wasn't treated by a trainee????
Normally the procedure is done by someone highly qualified and the trainee Doctors
'observe'. Only qualified Doctors who have passed numerous exams after many years of study are then able to commence using the technology. They have to learn the equipment and the anatomy first. They start with simple procedures and as their experience grows they are progressed to more complicated procedures but still supervised through all those stages. I've had an angiogram performed by a young Doctor who was supervised all the time. I have to say, I bled less and had much less pain from that procedure than any of the 5 ive had. Maybe it was luck, maybe it was the fact that they tend to be much more careful due to inexperience. They wouldn't let a novice loose on performing a stent procedure without a lot of catheter experience and supervision.
I have not had any positive experience with a teaching hospital...I don't want a trainee performing interventional procedure on me. But the trainee needs to get experience so someone has to be involved! Sometimes a person who can't afford the expense goes to a teaching hospital and assumes the risk for a price break.
Personally I would opt for the wrist. I wanted this for my last angioplasty but the cardiologist felt more comfortable with the groin, especially as he had to transport a number of tools to the affected area of the heart. They had trouble keeping my groin from bleeding even though an angioseal was used and I had to lay on my back all through the night.
I know the wrist is being used, and if the six hour period of no leg motion could be avoided, I'd certainly try it. I have a very difficult time staying still and they generally have to sandbag my leg, and my daughter has on several occasions sat on my leg to keep it from moving. Seems like a win-win situation, especially if your husband has arthritic issues.