Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Ischemia and heart muscle damage

Pat
A very close friend of mine is a pilot.  During exercise in Feb. he experienced some shortness of breath.  It was time for his annual flight physical and the EKG showed some irregularities and he subsequently underwent angiography which indicated partial occlusion of at least one coronary artery.  I believe it was the LAD but I'm not quite sure on that.He returned for placement of two stents.  
     He just recently had Thallium stress test done.  Apparently the cardiologist recommends "no further treatment", but his regular flight physician told him that the test did reveal ischemia, and the cardiologist earlier had told him a small area of his heart had been damaged.  Neither doctor mentioned Myocardial Infarction.  
     He continues to have shortness of breath with moderate exercise.  He says he has never experienced any pain. Of course, his license has been suspended and it does not appear he will be able to get it back mainly because the term "ischemia" was used in the test report.  Also, he just told me that at the time of the flight physical, they had found his triglyceride levels elevated into the 500's and put him on Lipitor.
     My question is:  1)Is it possible to have this ischemia and heart damage, and NOT to have had an MI? 2)What are the chances of him having an MI in the future? 3)If he has NOT had an MI, what are the indications for his future health with this history and the untreated ischemia?  I am very worried about him.
                Thanks, Pat M.
2 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
238671 tn?1189755832
PostReply&forum=cardio&message=31140&topic=Ischemia&subject=Ischemia and heart muscle damage&replyto=Pat&replytofile=31140.html&name=CCF CARDIO MD - DLB
Helpful - 0
238671 tn?1189755832
My previous answer appears scrambled by the computer.

If there is heart damage, that usually means MI. Ischemia does not mean an MI, just a risk of future MI. I am concerned that he has symptoms of shortness of breath with exercise and ischemia on a thallium, with a history of two stents. Generally, I would recommend a repeat catheteriztion for that sort of patient and, from the information you provided, it is not clear to my why this is not being done.
Helpful - 0

You are reading content posted in the Heart Disease Forum

Popular Resources
Is a low-fat diet really that heart healthy after all? James D. Nicolantonio, PharmD, urges us to reconsider decades-long dietary guidelines.
Can depression and anxiety cause heart disease? Get the facts in this Missouri Medicine report.
Fish oil, folic acid, vitamin C. Find out if these supplements are heart-healthy or overhyped.
Learn what happens before, during and after a heart attack occurs.
What are the pros and cons of taking fish oil for heart health? Find out in this article from Missouri Medicine.
How to lower your heart attack risk.