Though more men get them than women, women do have them the screening was instituted for men above certain age I really do believe they should extend it to women and even lower the age limit on it and save lives by doing so.
So I would qualify on those grounds.
As would my daughter. Judith would as well because her father my father in law also died when his ruptured.
edit to add the only benefit to my diabetes was the fact that in diabetics the growth of A.A.As is slowed for some reason.
What are you thoughts , do you think when we have it under control we won't get complications ?
@Bluetit1802 I am surprised that you are not offered an echocardiogram due to your family history - 2 of my friends have lost close relatives through a ruptured aortic aneurysm and are screened annually. My husband had an aortic root replacement 11 years ago and he still has regular checks. Luckily for him he was already being checked due to a leaking aortic valve so once his aorta reached the size that it needed to be operated on they did it.My dad died from a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism, having had no symptoms until the morning the ambulance carried him away. He was operated on immediately but didn't survive. As soon as screening became available my husband went for the screening but I was refused it as I am female. However, I did have a scan for something else around the same time and the sonographer also checked my aorta while she was at it.
@Bluetit1802 I am surprised that you are not offered an echocardiogram due to your family history - 2 of my friends have lost close relatives through a ruptured aortic aneurysm and are screened annually. My husband had an aortic root replacement 11 years ago and he still has regular checks. Luckily for him he was already being checked due to a leaking aortic valve so once his aorta reached the size that it needed to be operated on they did it.
Not at all!
Type 1 for 48 years. Blind in 1 eye and stage 4CKD, yes caused by T1D BUT my fault through bad control when I was younger. Putting a halt to bad control limits the complications later on in life.
I do think about what diabetes might do to me from time to time but I have more urgent medical conditions which will likely kill me long before my type 2 causes any serious damage.
I'm recovering from my second heart attack so I'm more concerned with that right now than whether I'll lose a toe in 10 years. Assuming I live that long.
I have had a heart attack, quadruple bypass surgery, have cancer and diabetes. The heart attack was almost 30 years ago. My experience has been just to do the very best I can and try to keep enjoying life. What more can you do, try not to waste too much time worrying and keep a positive mental attitude as far as possible.
But apart from that you are A OK
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