T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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584.1 | Good for the Medical notesfile. | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Thu Aug 15 1996 14:29 | 8 |
584.2 | Now it's my turn. | NETCAD::CREEGAN | | Wed Jan 29 1997 11:55 | 21 |
| My sister, Sue was found to have 5 aneurysms. Three were
clipped during two brain surgeries. The other two were
coiled. That is the procedure of snaking up a coil from
an artery in the groin area up to the brain and heating
it. The heat causes the aneurysm to melt, scar and with
hope the defect has collapsed and hardened (better than
what was there before).
On November 21st I had brain surgery for two aneurysms.
Both were clipped and recovery took eight weeks. I am
back to work now with short hair, a big scar, some
nerve damage to my left eyebrow, but still healthy.
My identical twin was tested and does NOT have any
aneurysms! Two other siblings tested negative.
It's scary, but now it is over. Every five years we
need to be retested to see if another weakness has
developed into an aneurysm.
kare
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584.3 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Wed Jan 29 1997 12:23 | 12 |
| Kare, thank God everything worked out so well for you and
your family!
> It's scary, but now it is over. Every five years we
> need to be retested to see if another weakness has
> developed into an aneurysm.
My Mother passed away almost 5 years ago from an aneurysm
near her spinal cord that no one knew she'd had.
Thanks for posting all this info here...!!
|
584.4 | aneurysms | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Jan 29 1997 12:35 | 14 |
| This condition runs in my cousin's family (must be from her husband's
side since no one else I am related to has it). Her daughter, now
about 30, has had a number of these sorts of surgery. She works for
some national organization for people with this inherited condition - I
could probably find out who they are if you are interested. My cousins
son, late-20-ish or a bit older, was recently diagnosed with the same
thing as his sister, though evnidently he doesn't have as many of them.
The son has always been very athletic whereas his sister is rather
sedentary and somewhat overweight - I don't know if their lifestyles
are part of the reason she was diagnosed much younger. So far both are
healthy, though going through the "spring" surgery as a young teen
wasn't much fun.
/Charlotte
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584.5 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Wed Jan 29 1997 13:33 | 4 |
| How do they screen for aneurysms which are not in the brain?
My Dad often wondered (after my Mom passed away) what they
could have done to find out about hers (near her spinal cord).
|
584.6 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jan 30 1997 07:13 | 3 |
|
I think maybe with an MRI...
|
584.7 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Jan 30 1997 19:30 | 11 |
| Last night's "The New Explorers" on PBS was all about medical
imaging (using CAT, MRI, and Ultrasound). A fairly big section
dealt specifically with aneurisms. They demonstrated this "coil-
ing" fix.
I'd suspect that the PBS web-site could lead you to more infor-
mation and, doubtless, a videotape.
Karen, I'm glad you and your sister are fine.
Atlant
|
584.8 | I feel very lucky. | NETCAD::CREEGAN | | Tue Feb 04 1997 12:24 | 25 |
| I was trying to get a feel how often doctors find
aneurysms and can do something pro-active (before
it burst). My neurosurgeon at Lahey said they
usually don't find them unless the person has been
in a car accident and they find them while checking
for head injuries. Also, severe headaches can some-
time be a warning. My maternal great-uncle woke up
with a severe headache and died a few minutes later.
We assume it was an aneurysm rupturing.
First I underwent an MRA/MRI. You are put into a
tunnel shape tube and pictures are taken (non-
invasive). These are not known
for great detail. They found one aneurysm using this
technique. Then I had an arterialgram (sp?) where
ionic dye is pumped into an artery near your groin
and more detailed pictures are taken. That's when
they found the second one.
I can't tell you how many people have told me that
they have been touched by a ruptured aneurysm in
their life (family, friend, coworker, etc). Since
the surgery in November there have been two episodes
of a neighbor and a teacher who died in Nashua and
Chelmsford of rupturing aneurysms. I feel very lucky.
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584.9 | | IJSAPL::ANDERSON | I feel all feak and weeble, doc | Fri Feb 07 1997 07:45 | 23 |
| Aneurysms are little time bombs ticking away inside your body. Normally
they are symptomless until they pop. They can be caused by degenerative
disease, syphilitic infection or may be congenital.
Congenital ones tend to be in the arteries of the brain. However they
do also occur in the major arteries around the heart. The size and
location of the artery largely dictates the eventual outcome.
Those in the brain are often treatable whilst those in the chest are
more likely to be instantaneously fatal.
As they cause no problems ahead of time, and screening the entire
population would currently be prohibitively expensive, it is one of
those things where you take your chance. Naturally high blood pressure
increases the chances of an aneurysm bursting.
Barbi, our tenant, runs a small company that teaches ballet to school
kids. Two weeks ago one of her most reliable dancers suddenly popped an
aneurysm in her head and was rushed to hospital, where she promptly
popped another. A couple of days ago they thought is safe enough to
operate and it appears to have been successful.
Jamie.
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