Rubicon wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 2:42 am
Rubicon wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 3:50 am
... identify precisely when this breathing difficulty started and if there is any flow data prior to that.
Also, add any/all information about this cough thing.
I will look for the actual ENT letter but in the meatime to elaborate and provide a bit more detail:
Despite his scoliosis, my father has not had any health problems, never visited a doctor or hospital in his life until he was a pensioner. Despite having some restricted mobilily he never had any pain or issues with his scoliosis and could play sports without breathing issues.
About 4 years ago maybe a bit longer, he developed a persistent cough. After a period of ignorning it and trying a few things like cough medicines he was referred to an ENT. Tthe ENT examined him with an endoscope and said he was fine from his perspective so the issue must lay elsewhere. He ended up being seen by another doctor who thought it could be a heart issue and was referrted to a cardiologist who organised echo's and so forth and it was identified that he had moderate mitral valve regurgitation which was causing the cough due to blood flowing backwards into the lungs. The cardiologist suggested that he undergoes watchful waiting and leave things as they are.
I ended up doing a deep dive on the subject and read that mitral valve issues never improve and only get worse. In the following months I could see his phsysical capacity was rapidly declining and his cough getting worse. It was around this time I also observed a few occasions where he would fall asleep on the sofa and stop breathing briefly. This was something new to me. I asked my mum about it and she said she also thought she had seen him do something similar in the night. After reading up I realised this was sleep apnea at which point I got the cpap treatment organised. Due to lack of response from the NHS and a rapid decline on his side, I ended up getting a further echocardiogram done privately which confirmed he had gone from moderate to torrential regurgitation, which is the worst kind and needs surgical treatment asap.
I will cut the long and difficult story of getting medical investigations and surgery during the peak of Covid times, but to summarise he got surgery and it was performed successfully. It was down to the wire and in the week or so he could barely move and had developed Cheynes Stokes Respiration (this did not look the same as his "usual" shallow breathing that I refer to in my original post) and was categorised as having heart failure.
To aummarise the cough was due to his heart problem and stopped following his surgery.
He had had a number of echos and checks since and he was given the all clear and no need for further checkups, in terms of rhythm, structure, ejection fraction it all falls within normal parameters now. He checks his heart rate, blood pressure and spo2 every day and they are also all normal. AHI's are below 5 and often below 2. His physical performanece levels slowly returned post surgery and now he routinely plays gold and does 10-15k steps a day without issues. For things like walking up steep hills, I have seen him puffing and struggling a bit, but I think thats just natural age related decline in performance.
Outside of this breathing issue, he doesnt have any other "known" health issues. General bloodwork is good, doesnt smoke and stopped drinking alcohol post surgery. He was not a big drinker but even a beer makes his sleep apneas much worse on the night he drinks.