Peter
Two years ago Peter developed breathlessness at night and fluid retention. A blood test revealed heart failure. He had previously had three heart attacks and been treated for atrial fibrillation. He attends nurse led heart clinics several times a year and also sees a cardiologist annually.
Peter’s heart failure was diagnosed two years ago in 2013 on a blood test done by his GP when he was experiencing breathlessness at night and fluid retention. He believes it was caused by damage to his heart muscle from three previous heart attacks (2001, 2006, 2006) in combination with atrial fibrillation (AF). Peter received the diagnosis on the same day he was due to have a cardioversion for his AF, which went ahead and succeeded in putting his heart back into normal rhythm. He was also put on a diuretic (water tablet), which corrected the fluid retention causing him to lose a stone in weight.
Treatments for Peter’s various heart problems have included: a total of five balloon angioplasties, the surgical removal of a large aneurysm of one of his coronary arteries together with a bypass of the damaged artery, several cardioversions and two ablations to correct his heart rhythm, each of which have worked only temporarily he recently discovered he has gone back into AF again. Peter currently takes bisoprolol, aspirin, warfarin, ramipril, furosemide (diuretic), a statin, plus lansoprazole to counteract gastritis caused by the aspirin. He organises his medicines using a weekly dosette box.
Peter sees a specialist cardiologist once a year and also attends nurse led heart function clinics and AF clinics in hospital several times a year where he has blood tests taken, his weight and blood pressure measured, and sometimes an electrocardiogram (ECG). He can phone the specialist heart nurses at any time and also has support from the nurses at the warfarin (anti-coagulation) clinic. He has regular blood tests through the clinics or the GP and assumes the results are satisfactory unless told otherwise. He feels he has enough information about his heart condition and worries less about it now than he used to. He rarely sees a GP about his heart; decisions about medicines and dosages are mostly taken by the hospital specialists and relayed to the GP. Peter feels well supported by his health professionals and is happy with the way his condition is managed.
Peter dislikes the term heart failure’, preferring to think of it as inefficient heart function’. He lives with his condition and exercises to maximise his heart function. He is currently attending cardiac rehabilitation phase 4 exercise sessions with a trainer. He has lost weight through reducing the amount of food he eats and feels much fitter and healthier than he was before his heart problem began fifteen years ago. He currently experiences no symptoms of his heart failure, and lives an active life. His general health is good, he keeps busy and feels positive about the future.