And So I Joined The
Club
It all started in April…wait, actually it all started 74
years ago. 74 years ago, a time when
dentist didn’t take ex-rays and they made $5 per cavity filled. From age 5 to 16, I went to the dentist every
6 months, and each time had 1 or 2 “cavities” filled. Cavities is in quotes because from age 16 on,
I only went to a dentist to refill one of those so called “cavities” and never had another.
Anyway, on to this April, I had a loose three tooth bridge
on one side of my uppers, an older bridge with some infection on the other, plus another totally missing tooth. The
dentist was recommending dentures. Mrs. C
said she was not going to bed every night with a bald toothless old man…fat and bald
OK, toothless no!
So, I made arrangements for implants. I only have 60,000 miles on my car, so I didn’t
need a new one.
That night we went out to dinner and because I couldn’t chew
for shit I damn near choked on my prime rib.
Well I did choke, but it was below my windpipe so I could breath. I could breath, but not swallow. Now while not breathing leads to death, the
inability to swallow will inevitably lead to the same via starvation. I was able to sleep and the next morning it
was off to ER. Actually we had to see
the accountant and then the ER. April remember.
In the ER they determined the lodged hunk of poorly chewed
prime rib could be pushed down and the throat cleared.
It was a fairly simple procedure, except surgery is never
simple. In dislodging the hunk of meat, part of my esophagus was perforated. It
would need a stent to heal. The ER at
that hospital was not prepared for this and so it was off in an ambulance to a
larger facility.
“Oh, and by the way in taking pictures of the puncture,
did you know you have an aortic aneurism?”
“Ah no, I did not know that. Is that bad?”
“Only if it bursts, then you will die quickly, and given
the size there is a fair chance that might not happen for a year or two,”
“So…bad.”
“Not good.”
A stent repaired the puncture and two weeks later the stent
was replaced. Then it was off to the
cardiologist. He felt the aneurism could
be repaired with a relatively inevasive process through a vein in the groin.
I KNOW!!
But first 800 tests.
Test 786 found an aortic valve stenosis.
It was explained that this was not good and so it was off to a heart surgeon.
The surgeon explained that to repair the aneurism and do a
value replacement it would require open heart surgery.
I am writing about all this mostly to just document for my
family, but I am sure there will be at least one reader who will tell me,
“They can repair both
issues through less invasive through the vein process.”
I read about that process and I asked the surgeon and was
told,
“Not in your case.”
Mind you, this surgeon and his team regularly do complete heart transplants. They know what the F they
are doing, so in answer to that process you may have heard about…NO.
In July my brand new Honda HR-V implants replaced my upper
shitty teeth and I was scheduled for OHS.
Oh, except I first had to go through that groin vein scope
thingy to determine if I also had blockage.
I did not. Both cardiologist and surgeon were somewhat surprised by this and assured me it was very good news. Finally, good news!
Surgery was on 8-8, a very good date according to Mrs. C the
numbers nut, as 8 is a lucky number in the Asian culture, a perfect day for Dr. Igimoto to do his thing.
No suspense, obviously I survived. I love Dr. Igimoto and his entire incredibly talented
team. These people have skills!
Now it is recovery time, a two to three month process if Mrs.
C doesn’t crack and kill me first.
Oh, the club? Not one I aspired to, but am now a proud member of
THE ZIPPER CLUB.
You are my hero tho I lost count of how many surgeries and procedures.
ReplyDeleteI am very glad you survived it all. You will be in my prayers for speedy healing, and for Mrs. C not to kill you.
ReplyDeleteI'm wondering if Dr Igimoto operated at 8am, just for a triple dose of luck. I'm so glad you survived all this and that almost choking on your meal was the reason "they" found all those things that needed fixing.
ReplyDeleteWow. That makes me even more afraid to go to the dentist! Good to hear that you survived! I agree that 8 is a lucky number, despite most casinos using 777 in their address. I have had some good wins on slot machines with the Asian/8 theme, like 88 Fortunes. Of course, your luck in this case is way better than mine! I wish you a speedy recovery, and minimal interference from Mrs. C, no matter how much you might deserve it.
ReplyDeleteAnd you made it through with flying colours! Now dealing with Mrs C
ReplyDeleteLove you Joe!! Keep blowing in that thing too!!!
What a year you've had. I'm glad all went well and Mrs. C didn't do you in.
ReplyDeleteHave a fabulous day and week, Joe. ☺
They say (whoever they is) that things happen for a reason. So a lodged piece of meat actually extended your time on this planet. Now just don't upset Mrs. C.
ReplyDeletedr's name changed to protec the innocent. 4 hospitals in 5 months, aughhh. surgery start around 7:15 but 8am would have been cool. room number in i.c.u. 323 adds up to 8.
ReplyDeletedr's name changed to protect the innocent. 4 hospitals in 5 months, aughhh. surgery start around 7:15 but 8am would have been cool. room number in i.c.u. 323 adds up to 8.
ReplyDelete