I'm a 51 year old
womanWomen's way, active and in good health - except... In my mid-thirties, I had two
TIAAlzheimer’s disease
Blood differential
Bronchitis and normal condition in tertiary bronchus
Chem-20
Chem-7
Dementia
Essential hypertension
Essential tremor
Group b streptococcal septicemia of the newborn
Gynecomastia
Incontinentia pigmenti on the leg's, both short in
duration no perm. damage or deficits. TEE revealed PFO, the size of a pencil eraser. At that time, I did well on a stress test and
HolterHolter monitor (24h). Three years ago, feeling shortness of
breathBreath alcohol test
Breath holding spell
Breath odor, had another stress test, flunked the
EKGAtrioventricular block, ekg tracing
Ecg
Exercise stress test. Because cardiovascular disease is rampant in my family (all 8 of my mother's brothers, and my fathers brother died of same; my mother had a heart attack at 54 and my brother at 53), I had a catheterization which revealed no blockages but showed a MVP. And this year, my Holter showed benign arhythmia. I'm taking Toprol XL, 25 mg per day which really helps my symptoms of MVP, which I'm told is not regurg. Also taking one baby asperin a day. Used to take 10 mg coumadin per day for PFO, which is what it took to get my level to 2.5. I stopped taking coumadin 6 years ago because, quite honestly, it scares me - fear of bleed out. and I also feel like, well, 2 little TIA's in fifty years... Doc says i'm taking a calculated risk.
These are my concerns; the fact that my stress test EKG is worse than it once was; that the holter moniter now shows something it didn't in the past; What of the synergy of these conditions co-existing? Is my risk of stroke greatly increased? Is this a dynamic trend? I'm afraid that things are continuing on a negative irreversible path. By the way, my lipid profile is good, total chol. 166, HDL and LDL within proper range. Should I reconsider coumadin because of the presence of these three diagnoses?