Sunday, September 24, 2006

hi, i'm anne and i have mvp

i've been diagnosed with this condition (via an echocardiogram http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/echocardiogram/HB00012) about 2 years ago during a routine physical examination. the health report from the hospital indicated that i have mitral valve prolapse. it sounded so big and so alien to me at that time - well, it still sounds big to me ... but thankfully, it doesn't sound that alien anymore :).

2 years ago, i knew so little about mvp. there was really no need to know anything else because i wasn't having any symptoms. what i do know was it's just some backflow in one of my heart's valve and it was something i need not worry about. that's it. end of story. and then middle of last year, a few months after i started living alone here in taipei, the need to know more - to know a lot, actually - presented itself ...

segue - i learned from lyn frederickson's "confronting mitral valve prolapse syndrome" (very informative ... IMHO, a must-read for people suffering from MVP) that "symptoms are biochemically triggered ... patients report a precipitating event" (pg. 28). it can be an illness, a stressful event ... and for me, i think it was that living alone which triggered it. i know i'm not built to live by myself. i need to be with somebody, with someone ... but i wanted to challenge myself ... i was actually successful - lived alone for almost a year - but not without a price.

it all started with difficulty breathing and then the inability to breathe deeply. a check-up and a chest xray ruled out any respiratory problem. maybe it was the altitude ... my apartment at that time was on the 6th floor - *ang taas nyan, grabe! -> i'm being sarcastic nu :P*. there were depressions and emotional breakdowns. it is true that i was having some relationship issues that time; but that definitely doesn't explain why one night i just found myself sprawled on the floor of my apartment, bawling my heart out - and that happened on more than one occasion.

one of the scariest experience i had prompted me to haul my ass to the emergency room at around 1130pm - it began with some difficulty breathing then palpitations then wooziness and then the numbness and tingling sensation on my left arm and then the shaking. i was thinking - "i'm too young to have heart a attack!" (not that it's unheard of -> http://www.c-r-y.org.uk/heart_attack_young_healthy_people.htm. i grabbed my keys, my money, my cellphone, my health card. at the ER, my temperature, blood pressure and oxygen level were checked. the doctor asked me what was wrong and was later told - "don't worry". he prescribed xanax (an anti-anxiety drug, http://psyweb.com/Drughtm/jsp/xanax.jsp) to soothe me. i was back at home before 1230 midnight.

and then there were other manifestations - chest pain, nausea, palpitations which wake me up at night, fatigue, pain in my arms and legs and the list goes on ...

2 comments:

So said...

Ang galing mo...you've coped so very well and so very greatly. I couldn't have. You never complain. I salute you mare. Mahal kita *slarp*

Anonymous said...

This is a great post on the reality of Mitral Valve Prolapse in every day life. I have Mitral Valve Prolapse and had it treated at Heathworx in Miami, Florida. Luckily they offered onsite counseling to help assure me I wasn't going nuts from the symptoms. Great post and keep it up.