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Working too hard can give you a Heart Attack Ack Ack Ack Ack Ack... My Heart Attack Story.

What a story. I am happy that you are still here to share it with us, and grateful that you did so. I will definitely remember this should it ever happen to me.

Wishing you a speedy recovery and success with your upcoming surgeries.
 
It can be working too hard, it can be doing too little, it could be extremely bad luck or it could be a direct result of your life choices, but having a Heart Attack is one of those scary things that we've all seen in movies, and have all heard the handful of common symptoms for, but most will never experience. Well...lucky me...I got to go through this last week on Thursday when in the middle of what was quite the work call (my real work, not what I do here) I started to feel what was a mild pressure in my chest. Nothing crazy, nothing like what you see in the movies. I wasn't clutching my chest, I wasn't struggling to breath, it just felt a little tight, like I had just run an extra wind sprint and expected it to just fade away. No big deal...

Well, a few minutes later it still wasn't feeling any better. Nothing extreme, and through the entire course of events, I never had what I would consider extreme pain anywhere. So, at this point I do a bunch of useless stuff, like pulling out my little portable Kardia Mobile EKG, my blood pressure cuff and my pulse oximeter, none of which showed me anything unusual. Another 5-10 minutes go by and nothing is getting better, so I go online and start looking up symptoms of a heart attack, because obviously who needs a cardiologist at a time like this, I'm perfectly capable of determining whether I am going to die in a few hours without treatment, right? hmmmm....

Another 10-15 minutes go by and I'm starting to imagine my left arm/shoulder is feeling...something. Well, of course I must be imagining that, since that's just one of the symptoms on every list you read, so it's likely just psychosomatic...just ignore that for a bit and see if it gets better. Wait, now I'm starting to feel a bit clammy and sweaty, and quite suddenly the words that came to my mind were

"Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes."

At that point, I decided to not let my vanity get in the way of survival so I actually called 911, took a couple of aspirin, unlocked my door and sat on my couch and waited. Paramedics got there within about 6 minutes where they got me loaded up and off we went. Hooked me up to an IV and a 12 lead EKG, which is where they were able to see indications of a heart attack. Got me to one of the better cardiac units in the State which was only another 7 minutes down the road where I was met by a full team who descended on me like a hive of bees, got me switched to their gurney and started sprinting me down the hall towards the Cath Lab. It was a pretty intense time, with a lot happening. A catheter was fed through the radial artery of my right wrist (yes, that hurts) and they had other stuff going into IVs on the other arm, and to make a long story short, found a 100% blockage of the Right Coronary Artery. That was then cleared and a stent was placed, and the part of my heart that had been starved of Oxygen was back online. Whew!

From there it was to the Cardiac ICU for that night and the next day, and while there was a little excitement that first night it's been smooth sailing since, and I was released on Saturday. My two kids and my ex-wife (we are very close friends) descended on my world and took over, cleaning out all the shit I like to eat and replacing it with the stuff that tastes like shit but that won't kill me, and helping in every way imaginable, and I've got amazing friends that have provided nothing but support, so I am in a good place in terms of getting through all this, but it's no joke.

I will have to go back for Open Heart Surgery later this year to replace my Aortic Valve (Bicuspid valve...not specifically related to the MI but a separate issue that it's time to take care of anyway) and to have a Coronary Bypass for the Left Anterior Descending Artery which has significant blockage, but that they wanted to wait to treat until they could do the graft and the valve replacement together. That's a few months down the road, after I've had a chance to fully recover from this most recent event.

So, why tell you all about this?

Here's the thing...the reason I am alive is that I resisted whatever urge it is that tells us to just tough it out, soldier on, stiff upper lip, don't be a whiner, that's something that happens to other people, I'm only 57 (fill in your age here), I'm 5'10" 155lbs, no obvious lifestyle problems other than too much coffee/sugar/fat/flavor/salt how could I be having a heart attack? I've ridden out kidney stones at home I can handle this, or whatever else. If I had followed my initial instinct to just go lay down for a few hours to see how I felt later, that may have awarded me the ultimate stupid prize in the ultimate stupid game. I am glad my son didn't have to find me there.

There isn't one set of symptoms for a heart attack. If you are concerned enough to be looking up heart attack symptoms PUT DOWN THE KEYBOARD, PICK UP YOUR PHONE AND CALL 911!
This is one of those medical events where once you've got a blocked coronary artery, there is a ticking clock counting down to zero, and if you decide you want to play the stupid game of watching that clock tick its way down as you ponder what web site to look at next, you may win the ultimate stupid prize.

So, please...please...at least take a minute and think about how you will react when you, or someone you love is experiencing anything that in any way could mean you're having a heart issue. Have no doubt that if you get to a hospital and you've just got some bad gas, that is a cause for celebration, not a sign that you shouldn't have called in the first place. I had quite a few of the nurses over the last few days tell me stories about people who waited too long, and you can see how it angers them when proper care is a 911 call away, but they just go die in their bedroom or end up dying on the way to the hospital instead because of their vanity.

On that happy note, I very much appreciate this community and thought that it might be worth sharing this crazy story for those who may go through something like it, in the hopes that instead of playing doctor with yourself, you will let an actual MD do it.

Thanks for listening, and now on with our regularly scheduled programming. Thank God.
wow!
A ****** eye-opener for all of us, thanx for sharing.
We promise to be good boys and girls, till you are fully better, then we start again!
Hope all goes well.
Not religious, but if anything, I will project all positive thoughts towards you.
 
@BDWoody , stay calm like myself , relax , good luck on open surgery later in the year and recovery time can many few months as i see many others at hospital cardiac ward ,

you have nice family friends that peep in the fridge see the junk food and throw it out and replace with something better , i don't have friends like that

in think due to when young we take risk of eating what may appear makes us feel okay , ( its very hard way to , this be a rambling ) i slipped a bit few times over months back to pizzas and that' can place me back at square one again ? or weight has been around 13 stone , better than 14.5 stone , , i do have often ( broccoli and fried cod fish ) so not pizza every-night , those papa john's are worse pizza they dump what appears be 1kg of cheese on the pizza , yuckkkk , domino's is more like 50% toppings 50 or maybe 40% cheese , not 100% like , " papa i've a had 40 pizzas in 30 days john's "

seems with your 12 trace ECG medication doctors that seen these cases many times knew the correct course of action to take , you'd be in good hands
i've had 12 trace and they knew i could be placed on medication , but it is sure slow at getting my lower heart chamber to pump correctly which isn't supplying correct % blood circulation why i get weakened so fast

i think even when we sat in a seat , appeared to be relaxed , our heart to pulse rate may still be going too fast ?

just relax , woody listen to your body if you feel something that isn't right , don't push it
stay healthy:)
 
Nothing crazy, nothing like what you see in the movies. I wasn't clutching my chest, I wasn't struggling to breath, it just felt a little tight, like I had just run an extra wind sprint and expected it to just fade away. No big deal...



"Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes."

… to make a long story short, found a 100% blockage of the Right Coronary Artery.



Thanks for listening, and now on with our regularly scheduled programming. Thank God.

Thank you for sharing. I hope you get better soon! This is good advice to heed!
 
I wish you the fastest possible recovery!

It is very likely that posting this story has the potential to save lives in the future. This forum has almost 55000 members and then there are the guests without an account. So, thanks again for posting it!
 
Okay, want2b Dr. Tim says, no more Tekton posts for you. :D

Get Well Soon my friend. ;)
 
Thank you, @BDWoody !
My cousin ... fit as a fiddle and younger than I am ... recently had a heart attack. He mentioned to his wife that he felt "odd", but then it passed. Fortunately, his wife is a nurse, and two days, two hospitals and three stents later, he is considered a survivor.

The tendency to "tough it out" can be lethal. :oops:

Hope you are soon back to your old, ornery self, yucky health food and all! :p :p

Jim Taylor
 
It can be working too hard, it can be doing too little, it could be extremely bad luck or it could be a direct result of your life choices, but having a Heart Attack is one of those scary things that we've all seen in movies, and have all heard the handful of common symptoms for, but most will never experience. Well...lucky me...I got to go through this last week on Thursday when in the middle of what was quite the work call (my real work, not what I do here) I started to feel what was a mild pressure in my chest. Nothing crazy, nothing like what you see in the movies. I wasn't clutching my chest, I wasn't struggling to breath, it just felt a little tight, like I had just run an extra wind sprint and expected it to just fade away. No big deal...

Well, a few minutes later it still wasn't feeling any better. Nothing extreme, and through the entire course of events, I never had what I would consider extreme pain anywhere. So, at this point I do a bunch of useless stuff, like pulling out my little portable Kardia Mobile EKG, my blood pressure cuff and my pulse oximeter, none of which showed me anything unusual. Another 5-10 minutes go by and nothing is getting better, so I go online and start looking up symptoms of a heart attack, because obviously who needs a cardiologist at a time like this, I'm perfectly capable of determining whether I am going to die in a few hours without treatment, right? hmmmm....

Another 10-15 minutes go by and I'm starting to imagine my left arm/shoulder is feeling...something. Well, of course I must be imagining that, since that's just one of the symptoms on every list you read, so it's likely just psychosomatic...just ignore that for a bit and see if it gets better. Wait, now I'm starting to feel a bit clammy and sweaty, and quite suddenly the words that came to my mind were

"Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes."

At that point, I decided to not let my vanity get in the way of survival so I actually called 911, took a couple of aspirin, unlocked my door and sat on my couch and waited. Paramedics got there within about 6 minutes where they got me loaded up and off we went. Hooked me up to an IV and a 12 lead EKG, which is where they were able to see indications of a heart attack. Got me to one of the better cardiac units in the State which was only another 7 minutes down the road where I was met by a full team who descended on me like a hive of bees, got me switched to their gurney and started sprinting me down the hall towards the Cath Lab. It was a pretty intense time, with a lot happening. A catheter was fed through the radial artery of my right wrist (yes, that hurts) and they had other stuff going into IVs on the other arm, and to make a long story short, found a 100% blockage of the Right Coronary Artery. That was then cleared and a stent was placed, and the part of my heart that had been starved of Oxygen was back online. Whew!

From there it was to the Cardiac ICU for that night and the next day, and while there was a little excitement that first night it's been smooth sailing since, and I was released on Saturday. My two kids and my ex-wife (we are very close friends) descended on my world and took over, cleaning out all the shit I like to eat and replacing it with the stuff that tastes like shit but that won't kill me, and helping in every way imaginable, and I've got amazing friends that have provided nothing but support, so I am in a good place in terms of getting through all this, but it's no joke.

I will have to go back for Open Heart Surgery later this year to replace my Aortic Valve (Bicuspid valve...not specifically related to the MI but a separate issue that it's time to take care of anyway) and to have a Coronary Bypass for the Left Anterior Descending Artery which has significant blockage, but that they wanted to wait to treat until they could do the graft and the valve replacement together. That's a few months down the road, after I've had a chance to fully recover from this most recent event.

So, why tell you all about this?

Here's the thing...the reason I am alive is that I resisted whatever urge it is that tells us to just tough it out, soldier on, stiff upper lip, don't be a whiner, that's something that happens to other people, I'm only 57 (fill in your age here), I'm 5'10" 155lbs, no obvious lifestyle problems other than too much coffee/sugar/fat/flavor/salt how could I be having a heart attack? I've ridden out kidney stones at home I can handle this, or whatever else. If I had followed my initial instinct to just go lay down for a few hours to see how I felt later, that may have awarded me the ultimate stupid prize in the ultimate stupid game. I am glad my son didn't have to find me there.

There isn't one set of symptoms for a heart attack. If you are concerned enough to be looking up heart attack symptoms PUT DOWN THE KEYBOARD, PICK UP YOUR PHONE AND CALL 911!
This is one of those medical events where once you've got a blocked coronary artery, there is a ticking clock counting down to zero, and if you decide you want to play the stupid game of watching that clock tick its way down as you ponder what web site to look at next, you may win the ultimate stupid prize.

So, please...please...at least take a minute and think about how you will react when you, or someone you love is experiencing anything that in any way could mean you're having a heart issue. Have no doubt that if you get to a hospital and you've just got some bad gas, that is a cause for celebration, not a sign that you shouldn't have called in the first place. I had quite a few of the nurses over the last few days tell me stories about people who waited too long, and you can see how it angers them when proper care is a 911 call away, but they just go die in their bedroom or end up dying on the way to the hospital instead because of their vanity.

On that happy note, I very much appreciate this community and thought that it might be worth sharing this crazy story for those who may go through something like it, in the hopes that instead of playing doctor with yourself, you will let an actual MD do it.

Thanks for listening, and now on with our regularly scheduled programming. Thank God.
I really appreciate you taking the time to write in full the train of thought you has throughout. If there was a list of psychological proclivities that caused death, machismo would be close to the top.

But, also, and I don't mean to minimize what happened to you, I can't help but think that what you did is familiar and in the spirit of the collective effort here. Humbling to admit that you only know so much by yourself, even for wholly internal things that by all rights only you alone can judge. I find it interesting that your at-home attempts to verify what's happening to you did not produce much beyond lingering doubts. The high-resolution test gear and training of the medics found the evidence you could not.

A scientific impulse was behind the call to 911.
 
@BDWoody thanks for a fantastic PSA - we all need that awareness.

Glad you're OK and here's cheering for a full recovery and beyond - these things are a reminder we can always do better - all of us.
I should mention it hits home - I have had two very close friends die from heart attacks in the last 6 years... in both cases there were warning signs that were ignored because we guys seem to tend to think we'll get better if we tough it out... I do my yearly checkup religiously.
 
What a truly thoughtful post. Thank you for sharing an experience that has more merit than any we talk about on this site. Heart disease has touched my family. My wife’s children (10 and 13 years old) lost their father Thanksgiving Day this year. He was 50. It’s no joke. And best wishes to you of course.
 
It can be working too hard, it can be doing too little, it could be extremely bad luck or it could be a direct result of your life choices, but having a Heart Attack is one of those scary things that we've all seen in movies, and have all heard the handful of common symptoms for, but most will never experience. Well...lucky me...I got to go through this last week on Thursday when in the middle of what was quite the work call (my real work, not what I do here) I started to feel what was a mild pressure in my chest. Nothing crazy, nothing like what you see in the movies. I wasn't clutching my chest, I wasn't struggling to breath, it just felt a little tight, like I had just run an extra wind sprint and expected it to just fade away. No big deal...

Well, a few minutes later it still wasn't feeling any better. Nothing extreme, and through the entire course of events, I never had what I would consider extreme pain anywhere. So, at this point I do a bunch of useless stuff, like pulling out my little portable Kardia Mobile EKG, my blood pressure cuff and my pulse oximeter, none of which showed me anything unusual. Another 5-10 minutes go by and nothing is getting better, so I go online and start looking up symptoms of a heart attack, because obviously who needs a cardiologist at a time like this, I'm perfectly capable of determining whether I am going to die in a few hours without treatment, right? hmmmm....

Another 10-15 minutes go by and I'm starting to imagine my left arm/shoulder is feeling...something. Well, of course I must be imagining that, since that's just one of the symptoms on every list you read, so it's likely just psychosomatic...just ignore that for a bit and see if it gets better. Wait, now I'm starting to feel a bit clammy and sweaty, and quite suddenly the words that came to my mind were

"Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes."

At that point, I decided to not let my vanity get in the way of survival so I actually called 911, took a couple of aspirin, unlocked my door and sat on my couch and waited. Paramedics got there within about 6 minutes where they got me loaded up and off we went. Hooked me up to an IV and a 12 lead EKG, which is where they were able to see indications of a heart attack. Got me to one of the better cardiac units in the State which was only another 7 minutes down the road where I was met by a full team who descended on me like a hive of bees, got me switched to their gurney and started sprinting me down the hall towards the Cath Lab. It was a pretty intense time, with a lot happening. A catheter was fed through the radial artery of my right wrist (yes, that hurts) and they had other stuff going into IVs on the other arm, and to make a long story short, found a 100% blockage of the Right Coronary Artery. That was then cleared and a stent was placed, and the part of my heart that had been starved of Oxygen was back online. Whew!

From there it was to the Cardiac ICU for that night and the next day, and while there was a little excitement that first night it's been smooth sailing since, and I was released on Saturday. My two kids and my ex-wife (we are very close friends) descended on my world and took over, cleaning out all the shit I like to eat and replacing it with the stuff that tastes like shit but that won't kill me, and helping in every way imaginable, and I've got amazing friends that have provided nothing but support, so I am in a good place in terms of getting through all this, but it's no joke.

I will have to go back for Open Heart Surgery later this year to replace my Aortic Valve (Bicuspid valve...not specifically related to the MI but a separate issue that it's time to take care of anyway) and to have a Coronary Bypass for the Left Anterior Descending Artery which has significant blockage, but that they wanted to wait to treat until they could do the graft and the valve replacement together. That's a few months down the road, after I've had a chance to fully recover from this most recent event.

So, why tell you all about this?

Here's the thing...the reason I am alive is that I resisted whatever urge it is that tells us to just tough it out, soldier on, stiff upper lip, don't be a whiner, that's something that happens to other people, I'm only 57 (fill in your age here), I'm 5'10" 155lbs, no obvious lifestyle problems other than too much coffee/sugar/fat/flavor/salt how could I be having a heart attack? I've ridden out kidney stones at home I can handle this, or whatever else. If I had followed my initial instinct to just go lay down for a few hours to see how I felt later, that may have awarded me the ultimate stupid prize in the ultimate stupid game. I am glad my son didn't have to find me there.

There isn't one set of symptoms for a heart attack. If you are concerned enough to be looking up heart attack symptoms PUT DOWN THE KEYBOARD, PICK UP YOUR PHONE AND CALL 911!
This is one of those medical events where once you've got a blocked coronary artery, there is a ticking clock counting down to zero, and if you decide you want to play the stupid game of watching that clock tick its way down as you ponder what web site to look at next, you may win the ultimate stupid prize.

So, please...please...at least take a minute and think about how you will react when you, or someone you love is experiencing anything that in any way could mean you're having a heart issue. Have no doubt that if you get to a hospital and you've just got some bad gas, that is a cause for celebration, not a sign that you shouldn't have called in the first place. I had quite a few of the nurses over the last few days tell me stories about people who waited too long, and you can see how it angers them when proper care is a 911 call away, but they just go die in their bedroom or end up dying on the way to the hospital instead because of their vanity.

On that happy note, I very much appreciate this community and thought that it might be worth sharing this crazy story for those who may go through something like it, in the hopes that instead of playing doctor with yourself, you will let an actual MD do it.

Thanks for listening, and now on with our regularly scheduled programming. Thank God.
Glad you are ok!

I did my Open Hear Surgery in July 2023, bicuspid valve as well + coronary bypass needed as well. Leakage on the valve was around 50 % so it was time to do it, I am 56.
 
Do exactly what the medical professionals tell you to do. We all want you to have a great recovery and a healthy life.

It was only yesterday I was reading news on the human trials of this:


A very cool brushless, mag lev, ttanium impeller design with the ability to dynamically adjust the flow, along with full digital control- they can even simulate the pulse (although it's not necessary). They are putting the pulse in basically because it would be weird not to have a pulse.
 
quite suddenly the words that came to my mind were

"Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes."

Kudos to you for heeding those words instead of second-guessing their source or reliability.
 
GWvS - and thanks for the advice. I will carry it with me.
 
I’m so very happy you were able to make this post and share such a good message. I wish you the very best of health going forward and a perhaps a new focus on your well being!

If I could add one comment (and apologies if I’m repeating) is to encourage all of you to get a calcium score at your next check up. You can find out exactly how much blockage you have, if any. Y
 
Well you have a plan, I'm glad you're ok.

I was replacing a fence post and it flipped and smacked the inside of my thy. No big deal. I had a heck of bruise which was rare for me.
I wake up at 03:00 about 12 hours later and I feel like I've just drank boiling oil. The worse case of heart burn/ indigestion I've ever had.
Blood clots. No numbness, pain, tingling short of breath nothing. A BOILING stomach is all I can describe. I had a 60% blockage but clots
closed the small artery almost 100%.

It's not always what they show in the movies at all, coffee, smoking of any kind, goofing the salts that regulate your heart all constrict
your arteries for short periods of time.

I'm just glad you had enough since to KNOW something was not quite right and you have a good family/support group.

I though I was superman to tell the truth a heart attack happens to other people.

I didn't have heart attacks, I caused heart attacks. Boy did that change my mind. 6.1 225 50" chest and 18" arms. Being a heavy mechanic
has a tendency to make you big. Everything weighs 100lbs in the drilling world. Thank God for retirement.
I pick up a root beer float, now, it seems heavy. :)

Get some chickens, they'll calm you down. Speaking of chickens, time to feed the little raptors.

A speedy recovery, regards.
 
Good luck @BDWoody. This is a timely reminder for everyone on ASR to watch our lifestyle. Audio is a sedentary hobby. We can move ourselves to lower risk groups by watching our diet and weight, doing daily exercise, and making sure our health problems are attended to and monitored.
We also have an unprecedented ability to listen to very high-quality audio while we work out or go on long nature walks. It doesn't have to be sedentary - but I'd also like to remind everybody that a moment of meditation (in whatever form) and chilling while listening to your golden audio setup is beneficial to your health as well. Having half a glass of Barolo while listening to music is a golden ritual of mine.
Note: I live by myself (my cat would say I sublease from him), which may make these rituals easier.
 
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