My 86-year-old husband and I feel we have been in a twilight zone since undiagnosed heart attack August 24 (ProBNP 1,734, though it had been very normal as of routine check April 2018). On August 24, ER diagnosed new atrial flutter / tachycardia, which are now persistent. DH can’t stand or walk without tachy. Before Aug. 24, he could walk up/down 100 stairs (with rests). Now he can’t even stand or walk slowly. The flutter/arrhythmias have been constant since Aug. 24. Breathless, swelling, very fatigued. This guy is a former psychologist and weightlifter and quite conscious of the need to maintain physicality.
Upon release from ER, instructions were to see cardiologist the next day or week. But Cardiologist referred DH (Dear Husband) to primary (Sept. 5). Primary ordered chemical stress test and Eliquis (anticoagulant). Shocked by the cost of Eliquis, I went looking for discounts. While on Eliquis web site -- a very clear warning: Do not use this drug if you have an artificial heart valve (which DH does). A week of calls to primary and cardiologist, who didn’t communicate with each other. Cardiologist said DH did NOT need the stress testing PCP had ordered. PCP allowed Warfarin in place of Eliquis, but Cardiologist wanted to stay with Eliquis. Another week of self-research to help DH affirm he wasn’t going to risk Eliquis (hey, leave alone pay for it). Another week to get the Warfarin RX. Cardiologist refused to see DH til his routine six-month checkup, which was Oct. 12. In the meantime on Sept. 5, Cardiologist tech angrily performed a two-second EKG and impatiently said “There’s the flutter.” Slammed out of the room, and angrily ordered DH to “wait.” They were going to do a cardioversion. DH also has severe back pain from failed back surgery, and the chair/exam table was excruciating. I went out to find tech and to say he was in too much pain and not quite ready for another procedure, that we were stressed by not knowing what was going on. She snapped and harshly ordered DH “You sit and wait.” We became upset with her disrespectful attitude left.
The next day DH phoned the Cardio to explain that he was nauseous from pain and needed to speak with cardio, not techs, and needed to ask questions. The longstanding Oct. 12 appointment was left as our only option to speak with the doc.
On Oct. 12, cardiologist pushed for cardioversion, implying it would cure all and was a piece of cake. We had already read a great deal about the statistical outcomes (roughly 50% will go back into arrhythmia rather quickly and that the procedure could create new arrhthmias including ventricle). We asked the RN what seemed like intelligent questions, including about the anesthesia (DH has endured a six-hour heart/bypass surgery and a seven-hour triple laminectomy since 2015). RN queried Cardiologist, who dismissed our concerns and basically patted DH on head saying, “There, there.”
We twisted our growing fears around to where we were in blind acceptance, and about to comply with the treatment recommendation. When the cardioversion scheduler called – they hadn’t even checked to see if DH’s anticoag factor was within range and for how long! It’s supposed to be within range for at least 3-4 weeks to reduce risk of stroke. DH had only begun taking Warfarin, and was only in range for maybe two weeks.
Finally, DH had kept track of his heart rate over the prior two months, and his rate changed wildly from tachy to bradycardia (20-30 bpm) at unpredictable times. Clearly, this was not simply flutter? This ?could? be Sick Sinus Syndrome?”or something else – for which cardioversion may not be the best. But no additional diagnostics were deemed necessary by cardiologist (phone consult via RN).
That caused us to feel we needed a second opinion and to ask our questions (now we have to wait til December 3). The pharmacists at the anticoag clinic all seem puzzled by why DH had to wait so long to speak with a real specialist.
My husbaand and I can get in to see our cardiologist within a day if there is an issue.
Have you tried asking the pcp's office to call for the appointment?
This reminds me of my DH's last colonoscopy. Office staff at GI docs told my husband to stop all meds 3 days before his appointment. "Even my warfarin" ( he also has an artificial heart valve). They told me yes, to discontinue the warfarin(!?).
I faxed the doc a letter about this. He then admitted my husband to the hospital for the procedure .
In your shoes, I would write all this out for PCP, and see if DH can't see another cardio this week.
Please don't rule out ER.
I think that you and your husband need to go to the University of Michigan Frankel Cardiology Center because 1) " where husband's heart surgery was done", and 2) they have an arrhythmia center. These doctors KNOW what they are doing and how to deal with arrhythmias. Say "Good Riddance" to the Cardiologist that your husband saw after his surgery.
Check to see if these doctors go to satellite "Specialty Clinics" located in clinics or hospitals in small towns around the state. We have two different groups of cardiologists who travel to 6-10 different small towns with a different doctor visiting the clinic every week.
https://www.umcvc.org/conditions-treatments/heart-arrhythmias
Honestly, we feel so uncared for that I think if 102 year-old Marcus Welby showed up at our front door, we'd go for it if he just seemed to care.
I'm reeling. I keep going back to check that DH was discharged from ER with those symptoms and instructed to see his cardiologist nearly two weeks later, then the communications cock-up with the PCP...
What species of doctor saw him in the ER?
"Overly concerned" is actually as THEY seem to see it, not how I see it. Cardiologist smirked like we were cute little "overly concerned" people. He said proudly he does eight cardioversions a day and it's "nothing." Well, he's not 86, eh?
Every good patient reads the patient information leaflets. Because we are responsible citizens who wish to work well with our health care professionals.
But the PILs are essentially a**-covers. If they were obeyed to the letter nobody who's actually ill would be able to take anything much.
So if your doctor px's something and it comes with a skull and crossbones on the label and dire warnings about not taking this if you've ever had or think you might have had athlete's foot... Don't just not take it, call your doctor and ask him to explain why you can safely ignore the warnings.
I did this once, when my mother was px'd colchicine for her acute attack of gout...
Self: "It says don't take this if you have impaired renal function. Aren't you concerned about her chronic kidney disease?"
GP: "I'm more concerned about the pain your mother is in."
So was mother, to be fair.
With the Eliquis, I'd be asking for a justification of that decision - how is it so very superior to Warfarin that we are prepared to ignore the manufacturer's own advice concerning artificial heart valves?
PS I asked about disaster response and availability. Warfarin would be delivered "by the ton" to a disaster site, not Eliquis.