Say what? Heart disease and hearing loss

by Carolyn Thomas   ♥  @HeartSisters

During a recent appointment for my first ever hearing test, I was asked (among many other tests) to repeat the words I heard the audiologist saying through my earphones, one after another.  I heard “ache” when the word was actually “ate”,  “lull” instead of “low”, “if” instead of “it”. My answers revealed what audiologists call a “loss of consonant clarity”.  Too bad so many words have consonants in them.

The audiologist also mentioned a link between hearing loss and heart disease. In fact, researchers have confirmed that the risk of age-related hearing loss generally increases as a person’s cardiac risk load increases.  Continue reading “Say what? Heart disease and hearing loss”

When female doctors treat female patients

by Carolyn Thomas   ♥  @HeartSisters

Last week, I was re-reading a 2018 study  that examined female survival rates following a heart attack diagnosis (a topic of great interest to me and other women whose cardiac symptoms have ever been misdiagnosed). Study authors explained what we already knew (“a large body of evidence suggests that women are less likely than men to survive traumatic health episodes like acute myocardial infarction).”  There are lots of studies out there suggesting the same conclusion, but this research tracked both the outcomes of cardiac treatments and also whether the treating physician was male or female. Their conclusions raised an astonished eyebrow or two at the time (notably, in male physicians!)  because researchers found that female heart patients who had been treated by female physicians had better survival outcomes than women treated by male docs. (There were some specific exceptions reported –  if, for example, a male physician has had considerable experience working alongside female colleagues).

I’m guessing that many male physicians don’t like to entertain those kinds of study findings.  . Continue reading “When female doctors treat female patients”

“You must go on. I can’t go on. I’ll go on. . .”

by Carolyn Thomas    ♥   @HeartSisters

“You must go on.   I can’t go on.   I’ll go on!”   These words are from Irish author Samuel Beckett’s 1953 novel, The Unnamable”. The late Nobel Prize winner was describing a reaction that many patients may find familiar, especially when facing the shock of a new medical diagnosis on top of your existing condition.

I wrote here about how overwhelmed I felt as a heart patient (“I can’t go on!”)  with distressing new joint pain, and a diagnosis of osteoarthritis. It was too much! I simply couldn’t bear yet another painful diagnosis piled onto my already debilitating daily symptoms of a coronary microvascular disease diagnosis!

But an amazing thing happened. Continue reading ““You must go on. I can’t go on. I’ll go on. . .””

Talking about women’s heart disease to medical students

by Carolyn Thomas  ♥  @HeartSisters

I was invited recently to do my “Heart-Smart Women” virtual presentation to a medical school class in New York.  For a heart patient like me, this was a dream invitation. I’ve spoken to thousands of people – including patients, the general public, doctors, nurses and academics- since graduating in 2008 from the WomenHeart Science & Leadership patient advocacy training at Mayo Clinic – but I’ve always known that what I really wanted to do was to reach our future doctors. Here’s why those trainees are so important to me.      . Continue reading “Talking about women’s heart disease to medical students”