One "incredible" heart attack leads to FH diagnosis

by Wenter Blair
(Texas )


I was out for dinner with friends one day when I unexpectedly began to feel faint. I became hot and started sweating profusely and my chest swelled with pressure. I was only 40 and thought this might be a hormonal issue because I recently had a hysterectomy, so the following morning I went to my OBGYN. She gave me an EKG test and told me that I had a heart attack the night before.


It was incredible! So incredible that my cardiologist didn’t want to believe it. I looked perfectly fine and everyone concluded that I was just too young to have a heart condition.

And yet, I still didn’t feel right. After several other tests resulting in "false positives", I finally pushed my doctor to give me a cardiac catheterization test to confirm everything was OK.

I actually flat lined and went into cardiac arrest during the test!

Four of my arteries were 90 percent blocked. They had to act immediately. While the doctors suggested an emergency quadruple bypass surgery, my husband instead chose the option of multiple stents. Over two weeks, cardiologists placed a halo of five stents around my heart. I miraculously survived, but continued to experience blockage in my arteries soon after. I also still did not know why I suddenly had a heart attack at 40.

I was blessed with a chance to learn of and visit a member of the Nobel prize-winning team that created statins, Dr. Helen Hobbs. She told me I have a genetic condition called familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) that causes lethally high LDL cholesterol. She connected me with a team of lipidologists and cardiologists who suggested that I have a procedure called LDL apheresis where LDL cholesterol is filtered from my blood and then returned to my body through IV’s in my arms.

But even this procedure provided only temporary benefits and 7 months into the therapy, I needed a sixth stent. All along I had been trying statin medications but they led to achiness and pain. I had to reduce my dose to pediatric quantities. My high LDL cholesterol still challenges me every day.

Because FH is genetic, I knew my children were at risk and sure enough my son Christian, 11, has tested positive for FH. I am working with his doctors to stabilize his cholesterol and we are trying to get it to a healthy level.

I just keep thinking, this never needed to happen to me and I don’t want it to continue to happen to my family or other women out there. I am a proud member of the American Heart Association’s Go Red Committee where I help to spread knowledge about heart disease.

FH is considered a common disorder and yet my medical team tells me it is one of the least diagnosed. It frightens me that many people, especially parents, don’t know about it. I urge all parents to have their children’s cholesterol checked.

The good news is that for many families affected by FH, treatment can help to reduce cholesterol levels and prevent future heart attacks and strokes!

And information is available – one web site is www.learnyourlipids.org from the National Lipid Association.

The important thing is to take action!

-Wenter

Click here to read or post comments

Join in and write your own page! It's easy to do. How? Simply click here to return to Your Health Story.

                Copyright © 2008-2024 - Health-Stories.org - All Rights Reserved                            For Informational Purposes Only, Not Intended As A Medical Advice Substitute.     Advertising Disclosure~Privacy Policy~Disclaimer

DMCA.com Protection Status

  " Digital  Millennium Copyright Act" Service        

Website Protection Pro