Hello,
Sorry to hear your story. these can be frustrating problems.
I know this test helps rule out thrombosis, but with 4,000 does it become more likely I could have a clot?
D dimer is very helpful if it is negative. A positive results like yours could be from so many different causes that it is not helpful.
Is this something that could have happened with my prior pacer woes or with the current machine being in the muscle?
Pacer related pain issues truly require someone with expertise dealing with this issue. Bruce Wilkoff is my mentor at the Cleveland Clinic and this is his expertise. There is no one better. Two issues come to mind with chronic pacer pain syndromes: 1. you worry about infections. 2. you worry about people with pain syndromes, more sensitive than most others related to pacemakers. This later cause does not mean you are making it up or that you have no pain tolerance. We do not understand why some people have chronic pain in the absence of infection, erosions, etc. If your two previous pacemakers did not bother you like this one, I would want to rule out a slow indulent infection. This requires an expert face to face evaluation to make sure the right thing is done. Many other centers have experience with these issues, I just happend to know Dr. Wilkoff and of his expertise.
I hope this helps, thanks for posting.
As for the infection part, my pacer doc has ordered a gallium scan to try to check on an infection as you describe. I hope this is going to be accurate enough as this whole pacer pre-erosion phenomena started 2 years ago and I still have no outward signs of infection--pus, redness, warmness, etc.
Thanks for your response.