So it's been 3 years since I last blogged about my heart health, and I thought it's about time I catch you up. The short story is that, earlier this year, my cardiologist at Hopkins again confirmed all is stable, and, earlier this week, I hiked to the top of Old Rag Mountain you see in this photo. So yeah, I'm doing well.
I've had a checkup at Hopkins least once per year. Each time I learn something new, whether it's the finer points of selecting the right cuff to check someone's blood pressure, or the ever-improving CT scanning equipment which now times imaging with heartbeat to measure the aortic root with less margin for error. As always I've felt fortunate to have access to great doctors who never stop learning.
Each appointment has followed pretty much the same pattern:
- Carefully measure my aortic root, and other key aspects of the heart, with an echocardiogram and sometimes a CT of the chest
- Provide current and previous test results to a team of experts, including my cardiologist and others, asking everyone to user their expertise and wisdom to identify possible changes in the heart
- Recall that the test results can vary for factors unrelated to my condition, that we're looking for changes measured in one to just a few millimeters, and that a handful of millimeters can make the difference between health and heart surgery
- Discuss how I've been feeling, my general health, the test results, and their conclusions
- Leave with about 75% relief that things seem stable and optimism that they'll remain so, and 25% sobriety that it doesn't always go that way
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