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A last minute addition to the newsletter - this is a patient’s story
written by MOONSHINER
How often do we read of the 60`s being a decade of major change in our
society? How has that change been reflected in our treatment as heart patients?
I had my first infarction (heart attack) away back then and this is my personal
view of the past 40 years.
It was only about 1960 that Cardiology was established as a specialty in
the RVH with patients concentrated in wards 5& 6. Previously heart disease was
treated as a general medical condition by consultants who handled a variety of
illnesses. Patients were allocated to a consultant rather than to a ward. About
the middle of the 60`s the intensive care cubicles were installed in the ward
and the cardiac ambulance service with its portable defibrillators was
introduced. In both local and national newspapers there was frequent mention of
the leading world-renowned heart facilities at the Royal Victoria Hospital led
by Frank Pantridge. However, the
most notable event
of the decade occurred in December 1967 in South Africa where Christian Barnard
carried out the first successful heart transplant. This must have really
captured my imagination for exactly one month later I had my first heart attack!
Today it is
not unusual to meet very young people with heart problems but back then it
seemed to be restricted to older people and so at 23 years old I seemed to have
been a bit of a surprise-package! I was a rare specimen and it seemed that
every doctor and medical student in the hospital examined me. Unfortunately not
one of these examinations produced an alternative diagnosis. After the few day`s
bed-rest and two weeks convalescence, which seemed to be the norm at that time,
I was discharged in much the same way as patients now. I may have been
physically well enough to be out of hospital but I had not adjusted to what had
happened and had absolutely no idea as to what to expect of my illness.
I felt 100%
and did not see any difference between me and my mates. Having only been a
smoker for 2 years I simply did not believe that my heart attack was totally
down to cigarettes. It seems incredibly stupid now but I was out playing
football again the Saturday following my release! My smoking and drinking if
anything increased, as I reacted to the idea that anything might be wrong.
Incredibly I was able to continue playing football with no suggestion of chest
pain while I yo-yoed in and out of hospitals with severe angina attacks. It
almost seemed that I was suppressing the angina that my activities would have
been expected to engender until it built up into a mass surge which could no
longer be controlled. Whatever the reason I landed in hospitals in various parts
of the country over the next 5 years.
Hospitals
then were rather different from today. The overwhelming odour of disinfectant
was powerful enough to clear the lungs within a few minutes of arrival! The
starch in the bed-linen was abrasive and the beds were very uncomfortable.
However, there was a much more relaxed atmosphere with a greater tolerance than
could be possibly entertained today. In those days everybody seemed to smoke
and, although we were constantly advised against it, patients (and staff!) were
no different. Although open smoking in the ward was banned
most
patients would regularly disappear for a smoke!
One of my mates regularly used to visit with a 6-pack which we would share on
the verandah of the old hospital! My breath must have alerted people to this but
never a word was said. Today I would probably, quite rightly, be slung out!
At that
time heart patients were wrapped in cotton wool but clinical studies were being
made in London on the effects of exercise on cardiology problems. I suggested
that, since I was young and essentially very fit, I would be an ideal candidate
for these studies. Nobody wanted to know so I devised my own hospital fitness
routine. The roof girders on the verandah did not quite enable chin-ups but one
could still do pull-ups! The stairway to the Caves Restaurant provided the
means for stamina training. Nowadays there are organised aerobic classes for
those that want them.
Student doctors used to train on the wards. Every
morning, prior to
the consultant`s round, a bunch of them would congregate round the foot of the
bed to discuss your case. They would analyse the symptoms, work out treatment
and decide on a prognosis for when the consultant questioned them. How such a
bunch of pessimists could ever hope to make people well is beyond me! It was
normally a great relief when the consultant made his appearance! It is amazing
to think that probably some of those guys are now consultants!
More importantly, student nurses were trained on the wards with
occasional 6 week blocks of classroom work. While on the wards part of their
course was to do projects on individual patients. I was the subject of a number
of these projects and through talking to the students (who were pretty much my
peers) about the effects of heart disease on my life I was pushed into thinking
about what was happening and how I was reacting. We were learning the basics of
cardiology together. Sometimes I wonder how some of those students fared in
tests when they wrote about some of my wilder ideas. However, the benefit was
that when I had my next heart attack in 1973 I was
more able to
handle the situation.
On this
occasion there were no doubts that I had had an attack with noticeable physical
impairment which had slowly developed over the years. At this time, I was
planning on getting married so I was really at a crossroads situation.
Thankfully at this time I had absolutely brilliant support from my GP who gave
hours of his time to discussing my difficulties, having children, employment
prospects, likely progress of the disease. My girlfriend and I had even more
intense discussions on the subject with the end result that we did marry. Our
basic reason was that we were as entitled as anyone else to make a life for
ourselves. Heart disease is only a difficult part of life which might make the
pursuit of our hopes and dreams harder but didn`t actually change the essence of
our dreams. Like all of you, I have heart disease and have no option but to make
the best of it, but it speaks volumes for my wife that she has accepted the
uncertainty and problems over the years.
Nowadays,
virtually everybody you talk to in the cardiac ward seems to be in line for some
sort of surgery like stents, by-passes and defibrillators but at the beginning
of the 70`s recuperation seemed to be the order of the day. At this time the
by-pass surgery which now creates huge waiting lists and such press comment was
simply in its infancy. Throughout the 70`s when I would start to flag there
would always seem to be another new drug to get me going again. By-pass surgery
is now an every-day practice. We all know the miracles of defibrillators. As I
write Tom Christerson is living at home having been discharged from hospital in
April 2002 following the trial implantation of an electronic heart on 13th Sept
2001. Phenomenal advances have been made in medicines, diagnostic and surgical
techniques and electronic devices over the last 30 years.
Not only
should we relish these developments but we should also note that consultants,
doctors, nurses, technicians and probably a range of other people have had to
absorb all this progress so that they can use it effectively in their day to day
work. I once got hold of a book on nuclear cardiology which I assume was about
those tests which use radio-active material. I can`t be sure because I only
understood about 10% of the words. No matter how intelligent the people may be I
rather suspect that many of the advances require several hours of hard study on
top of day to day activities.
However,
the excitement of the new can produce unbalanced reactions. I was eventually
considered for by-pass surgery about 1980 and ended up with the most bizarre
situation in my life. After the test sequence it was evident that the surgeon
did not think he could safely operate and my own consultant was in agreement.
However, the ward doctor was advising me that I should insist on the operation
and that if I was not going to pursue the operation I should cease work
immediately. I didn`t think I was at the stage where I needed to gamble on an
operation that the surgeon didn`t fancy! Work was better than all the drugs
prescribed because it was an enormous lift to know that I was handling a
difficult position extremely well in spite of the heart problems. I loved what I
did and seemed to have an enormous capacity for work even if I regularly ended
up having to take some time off. You will all know it is easier to do
more
when enjoying yourself. It was an extremely difficult time when I actually did
finish working a decade later.
In the
mid-90`s I eventually got put on the waiting list for by-pass surgery. I was
deteriorating fast and it should have been no surprise to anybody that I
eventually collapsed in Frames while having lunch on 18-03-96. Fortunately, my
wife and an unnamed nurse from Royal Maternity Hospital kept me going until the
cardiac ambulance arrived. Again the surgeon wasn`t keen to do the by-pass but
at this stage it was something that had to be attempted. Two months later I
breezed through the operation and a month after that I was fitted with my
defibrillator. Since then I have had two shocks but I can still write this
twaddle and continue to make plans in expectation of a long future. I write this
because 17-01-03 will be the 35th anniversary of my 1st heart attack. There
have been times when things have been very black but my wife, daughter and
myself have succeeded in making a happy life for ourselves. You are alive until
you are dead so make the
most of it! HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL! - written
by MOONSHINER
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