Thanx man, I appreciate it!
No, I haven't taken her in for a brake fluid flush yet, but I need to. In regards to the tale. It is definitely a crazy story. that I never saw coming. All I remember is going to the grocery store the night before, and when I got home from the store, I went to bed. Next thing I know, it's 2-3 days later, and I'm waking up in the cardiovascular critical care unit at the hospital with a bunch of lines coming out of me. I started freaking out and it took a few days for all the drugs to wear off before I could process what had happened. I never knew that I had a tear in my aorta to begin with. Apparently it had been building up for years. They told my family that when they cracked me open, and saw how distended my aorta was that they were really suprised that it didn't burst in the ambulance ride to the hospital for surgery. One funny thing to come from this is when my family finally gave me my phone back, I had a ton of notifications from mud in regards to the Witt's End drama thread that was going on
Thank you and same here. The running joke at work, is that God & Satan both looked thru the memes on my phone at the same time and said "Put him back on earth! It's just to soon!"
Good ole Archer! Man I haven't seen that show in years. Aneurysm wise...they all scare me! AAA's scare me the most though
Unfortunately, they found another tear while they were in there. So I still have a residual Type B tear on the descending side of my aorta. It's sucks because they are saying this is a hereditary issue, but it is what it is. They told me they were not concerned about the tear they found, and that with some lifestyle changes, diet changes and keeping my blood pressure under 130, they will just continue to monitor me with CT and doppler scans every 6 months.
I work in the operating room and I would be liar if I told you I wasn't scared, but I made a promise to myself right before I left the hospital that I'm not going to let this define me, and that I'm going to give it everything I have and go down swinging.
I've scrubbed a few emergency Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm cases in my day. Of all of the cases I've scrubbed, those cases are the hardest to handle because it's the closest someone coming back to surgery will ever be to death, and I've never seen anyone survive a AAA. So you can imagine how I felt when I woke up and found out what happened to me.
I know how lucky I am and I'm really grateful that I got a second chance at life