OTD 2008: My pacemaker story

OTD: November 18, 2008

My pacemaker story.....

I felt some minor discomfort in my chest that morning. I didn't think it was a big deal, but I decided to drive to the emergency room.

While alone in the exam room, I passed out. I remember waking up on the table and looking up into the lights with doctors and nurses surrounding me. I was told I'd passed out and that my heart had stopped. I didn't believe it until a nurse tore the strip of paper off the monitor to show me a flat line of my heart beat for .....60-seconds!

St. Elizabeth Cardiologists Dr. Sheldon Brownstein and Dr. Stuart Steinberg handled my case. Dr. Brownstein said I hold his record for a patient flatlining the longest and coming out of it on their own! 

I've always been a fainter. I get queasy at the sight of blood. Dr. Brownstein believed that when I'd fainted over the years my heart had likely stopped for seconds at a time. He decided that rather than chance my heart stopping again, perhaps while I was driving, or while alone, he would put in a pacemaker.

The surgery was three days later, and I went home two days after that. I insisted on being discharged because I had promised to take Peyton to see the Cheetah Girls in concert at U.S. Bank Arena. In hindsight, that wasn't the smartest of my ideas. I remember huffing and puffing as I walked the steps in the arena.

The pacemaker is a good conversation starter. I rarely think about it or feel it. It comes into play at the airport where I have to step to the side and be checked at security. I'm not supposed to ride roller coasters. I avoid magnets. An app on my phone monitors the device and see my cardiologist once a year. I have not fainted since getting it.

I received a new pacemaker August 17, 2018. It was implanted by Dr. J. Christian Hayes of St. E. The process was simple: Incision in my chest. Unscrew the leads to the pacemaker. Take it out. Put a new one in. Attach the leads. Sew me up. I went home later that afternoon.

The battery life is expected to be around 10-12 years. I'll need a replacement around age 65.

However, I firmly believe the roller coaster of Cincinnati sports will shorten the battery life.


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