<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
  <channel>
    <title>health &amp;mdash; Mitchell Report</title>
    <link>https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:health</link>
    <description>A personal blog for Michael Mitchell</description>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 22:38:21 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title>Echo Results Looking Good</title>
      <link>https://michaelmitchell.blog/echo-results-looking-good?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[A middle-aged man with dark hair and glasses sits at a wooden desk in a warmly lit room, looking thoughtfully at a paper he holds with both hands. The paper features a red heart with a white heartbeat line and a green upward trending graph. He wears a blue button-up shirt. On the desk in front of him is an open notebook with handwritten notes and a black pen resting on it. To his right is a tall glass of iced tea with a lime wedge on the rim. To his left, a small potted plant and a framed sign read &#34;Grateful Stronger Moving Forward&#34; with a small red heart at the bottom. Behind him on the wall is a framed picture of a red heart with a heartbeat line and the words &#34;Progress Patience Purpose.&#34; A laptop on a side table displays a similar graph. Books titled &#34;The Healing Heart&#34; and &#34;A Path to Wellness&#34; are stacked near the window, through which sunlight filters, casting a warm glow. The overall atmosphere is calm and reflective.&#xA;&#xA;smallA man reflects with quiet satisfaction as he reviews positive echo results, surrounded by reminders of gratitude, strength, and progress in a warm, sunlit room./small&#xA;&#xA;I wanted to share a long-overdue health update about what has happened this year and why I can finally talk about it. I recently had my second Camzyos cardiology echo and doctor’s visit of the year. I normally go every six months, and this visit gave me my best numbers yet.&#xA;&#xA;On Camzyos, my obstruction is much better controlled. My echo looked fantastic, so I included a table below comparing my results before and after starting Camzyos.&#xA;&#xA;When I first started Camzyos, I was not getting my refills consistently because of REMS requirements and the timing of my echoes and doctor’s visits. This created gaps in treatment. Once my refills became consistent and those delays stopped, the treatment began working much better.&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;br&#xA;&#xA;div style=&#34;overflow-x:auto&#34;&#xA;table&#xA;theadtrthTime point/thth style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Camzyos status/thth style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Ejection fraction/thth style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;LVOT gradient at rest/thth style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;LVOT gradient with Valsalva / provocation/ththMitral valve / SAM notes/ththWhat changed/th/tr/thead&#xA;tbodytrtdApr. 2021/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Before Camzyos/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;65-70%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;90 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;94 mmHg/tdtdSystolic anterior motion (SAM); mild-to-moderate mitral regurgitation/tdtdHistorical severe obstruction/td/trtrtdAug. 2024/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Before Camzyos/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;60-65%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;27 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;51 mmHg/tdtdSAM; moderate mitral regurgitation/tdtdStill obstructive, though less severe than 2021/td/trtrtdMay 2025/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Before starting Camzyos protocol/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;50-55%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;65 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;100 mmHg/tdtdSAM; mild mitral regurgitation/tdtdStrong pre-treatment baseline: significant obstruction/td/trtrtdJul. 2025/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Early Camzyos follow-up/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;60-65%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Not listed in summary/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;57 mmHg/tdtdTrace mitral regurgitation/tdtdEarly improvement from the May 2025 provoked gradient/td/trtrtdAug.-Nov. 2025/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;On Camzyos, still being adjusted/monitored/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;60-65% where listed/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Varied; one report listed 39 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;Varied, including 84-145 mmHg in follow-up echoes/tdtdMitral regurgitation generally mild or not significant in these reports/tdtdImprovement was not a perfectly straight line/td/trtrtdJan. 2026/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;On Camzyos/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;60-65%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;10 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;24 mmHg/tdtdNo major valve issue highlighted in the summary/tdtdObstruction was much lower than the May 2025 baseline/td/trtrtdJun. 2026/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;On Camzyos, latest echo/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;55-60%/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;3 mmHg/tdtd style=&#34;text-align:right&#34;8 mmHg/tdtdMild SAM noted, but “no outflow obstruction”; mild mitral regurgitation/tdtdBest documented result in this set: very low gradients/td/tr/tbody&#xA;/table&#xA;/div&#xA;&#xA;So yes, I am in a much better place. My heart is working with far less obstruction than it has in years. Between Camzyos and taking Metoprolol ER 200 mg twice daily, I am cautiously optimistic that I can remain on this path.&#xA;&#xA;These results do not mean that my hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is gone, but they do show that the treatment is doing what it is supposed to do. After years of seeing much higher numbers, I am grateful to finally be able to share some genuinely encouraging news.&#xA;&#xA;#faith #health #personal&#xA;&#xA;p style=&#34;font-weight: bold; font-size: 0.95em; font-family: Georgia, serif; color: #0c5c35; line-height: 1.8;&#34;&#xD;&#xA;  span class=&#34;tinylytics_kudos&#34;/span&#xD;&#xA;  💬 a href=&#34;https://remark.as/p/michaelmitchell.blog/echo-results-looking-good&#34;Discuss.../a&#xD;&#xA;  a href=&#34;mailto:michaelm2@michaelmitchell.blog&#34; style=&#34;color:#0c5c35;text-decoration:none&#34;✉️ Email/a&#xD;&#xA;  🦣 a href=&#34;https://writing.exchange/@michaelm2&#34; rel=&#34;me&#34; style=&#34;color: #0c5c35; text-decoration: none;&#34;Reply on Mastodon/a&#xD;&#xA;/p&#xD;&#xA;!--emailsub--]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/66P70wfB.jpg" alt="A middle-aged man with dark hair and glasses sits at a wooden desk in a warmly lit room, looking thoughtfully at a paper he holds with both hands. The paper features a red heart with a white heartbeat line and a green upward trending graph. He wears a blue button-up shirt. On the desk in front of him is an open notebook with handwritten notes and a black pen resting on it. To his right is a tall glass of iced tea with a lime wedge on the rim. To his left, a small potted plant and a framed sign read &#34;Grateful Stronger Moving Forward&#34; with a small red heart at the bottom. Behind him on the wall is a framed picture of a red heart with a heartbeat line and the words &#34;Progress Patience Purpose.&#34; A laptop on a side table displays a similar graph. Books titled &#34;The Healing Heart&#34; and &#34;A Path to Wellness&#34; are stacked near the window, through which sunlight filters, casting a warm glow. The overall atmosphere is calm and reflective."/></p>

<p><small>A man reflects with quiet satisfaction as he reviews positive echo results, surrounded by reminders of gratitude, strength, and progress in a warm, sunlit room.</small></p>

<p>I wanted to share a long-overdue health update about what has happened this year and why I can finally talk about it. I recently had my second Camzyos cardiology echo and doctor’s visit of the year. I normally go every six months, and this visit gave me my best numbers yet.</p>

<p>On Camzyos, my obstruction is much better controlled. My echo looked fantastic, so I included a table below comparing my results before and after starting Camzyos.</p>

<p>When I first started Camzyos, I was not getting my refills consistently because of REMS requirements and the timing of my echoes and doctor’s visits. This created gaps in treatment. Once my refills became consistent and those delays stopped, the treatment began working much better.
</p>

<p><br></p>

<div style="overflow-x:auto">
<table>
<thead><tr><th>Time point</th><th style="text-align:right">Camzyos status</th><th style="text-align:right">Ejection fraction</th><th style="text-align:right">LVOT gradient at rest</th><th style="text-align:right">LVOT gradient with Valsalva / provocation</th><th>Mitral valve / SAM notes</th><th>What changed</th></tr></thead>
<tbody><tr><td>Apr. 2021</td><td style="text-align:right">Before Camzyos</td><td style="text-align:right">65-70%</td><td style="text-align:right">90 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">94 mmHg</td><td>Systolic anterior motion (SAM); mild-to-moderate mitral regurgitation</td><td>Historical severe obstruction</td></tr><tr><td>Aug. 2024</td><td style="text-align:right">Before Camzyos</td><td style="text-align:right">60-65%</td><td style="text-align:right">27 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">51 mmHg</td><td>SAM; moderate mitral regurgitation</td><td>Still obstructive, though less severe than 2021</td></tr><tr><td>May 2025</td><td style="text-align:right">Before starting Camzyos protocol</td><td style="text-align:right">50-55%</td><td style="text-align:right">65 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">100 mmHg</td><td>SAM; mild mitral regurgitation</td><td>Strong pre-treatment baseline: significant obstruction</td></tr><tr><td>Jul. 2025</td><td style="text-align:right">Early Camzyos follow-up</td><td style="text-align:right">60-65%</td><td style="text-align:right">Not listed in summary</td><td style="text-align:right">57 mmHg</td><td>Trace mitral regurgitation</td><td>Early improvement from the May 2025 provoked gradient</td></tr><tr><td>Aug.-Nov. 2025</td><td style="text-align:right">On Camzyos, still being adjusted/monitored</td><td style="text-align:right">60-65% where listed</td><td style="text-align:right">Varied; one report listed 39 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">Varied, including 84-145 mmHg in follow-up echoes</td><td>Mitral regurgitation generally mild or not significant in these reports</td><td>Improvement was not a perfectly straight line</td></tr><tr><td>Jan. 2026</td><td style="text-align:right">On Camzyos</td><td style="text-align:right">60-65%</td><td style="text-align:right">10 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">24 mmHg</td><td>No major valve issue highlighted in the summary</td><td>Obstruction was much lower than the May 2025 baseline</td></tr><tr><td>Jun. 2026</td><td style="text-align:right">On Camzyos, latest echo</td><td style="text-align:right">55-60%</td><td style="text-align:right">3 mmHg</td><td style="text-align:right">8 mmHg</td><td>Mild SAM noted, but “no outflow obstruction”; mild mitral regurgitation</td><td>Best documented result in this set: very low gradients</td></tr></tbody>
</table>
</div>

<p>So yes, I am in a much better place. My heart is working with far less obstruction than it has in years. Between Camzyos and taking Metoprolol ER 200 mg twice daily, I am cautiously optimistic that I can remain on this path.</p>

<p>These results do not mean that my hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is gone, but they do show that the treatment is doing what it is supposed to do. After years of seeing much higher numbers, I am grateful to finally be able to share some genuinely encouraging news.</p>

<p><a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:faith" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">faith</span></a> <a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:health" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">health</span></a> <a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:personal" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">personal</span></a></p>

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  💬 <a href="https://remark.as/p/michaelmitchell.blog/echo-results-looking-good">Discuss...</a>
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      <guid>https://michaelmitchell.blog/echo-results-looking-good</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 11 Jul 2026 04:23:13 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Finally, Great Heart News</title>
      <link>https://michaelmitchell.blog/finally-great-heart-news?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Great news today at my follow-up with my hypertrophic cardiomyopathy specialist. Camzyos is really starting to work. My most recent echo earlier this week was excellent, and so was the heart cath I had in late December.&#xA;&#xA;In fact, the heart cath showed that Camzyos is working well enough that I do not need to rush into an alcohol ablation or a septal myectomy. If I ever do need an intervention in the future, my doctor said I would be a good candidate for septal alcohol ablation.&#xA;&#xA;I also told my doctor that, if at all possible, I would prefer to stay on medication and avoid any surgical treatment.&#xA;&#xA;More good news: I will not have to see him or have another echo for six months.&#xA;&#xA;I told the doctor I have been feeling great since starting Camzyos. My metoprolol dose was increased last month, and I have been sleeping much better. He said everything seems to have calmed down, and my gradients with exertion have improved greatly. So, no immediate decisions need to be made.&#xA;&#xA;He also had a positive conversation with the cardiac interventionist and personally read my echo himself. It looked good, and he is pleased. I told him that I think staying consistent with my medication has helped. Lately, I have not had delays caused by the pharmacy needing certain tests before refilling my prescription, and I have not had any breaks where I was off the medication.&#xA;&#xA;That means my main job now is simply dealing with the pharmacy and making sure I get my Camzyos on time each month.&#xA;&#xA;So let&#39;s pray it keeps trending in the right direction. I actually feel normal for once.&#xA;&#xA;#health #news #personal&#xA;&#xA;p style=&#34;font-weight: bold; font-size: 0.95em; font-family: Georgia, serif; color: #0c5c35; line-height: 1.8;&#34;&#xD;&#xA;  span class=&#34;tinylytics_kudos&#34;/span&#xD;&#xA;  💬 a href=&#34;https://remark.as/p/michaelmitchell.blog/finally-great-heart-news&#34;Discuss.../a&#xD;&#xA;  a href=&#34;mailto:michaelm2@michaelmitchell.blog&#34; style=&#34;color:#0c5c35;text-decoration:none&#34;✉️ Email/a&#xD;&#xA;  🦣 a href=&#34;https://writing.exchange/@michaelm2&#34; rel=&#34;me&#34; style=&#34;color: #0c5c35; text-decoration: none;&#34;Reply on Mastodon/a&#xD;&#xA;/p&#xD;&#xA;!--emailsub--]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Great news today at my follow-up with my hypertrophic cardiomyopathy specialist. Camzyos is really starting to work. My most recent echo earlier this week was excellent, and so was the heart cath I had in late December.</p>

<p>In fact, the heart cath showed that Camzyos is working well enough that I do not need to rush into an alcohol ablation or a septal myectomy. If I ever do need an intervention in the future, my doctor said I would be a good candidate for septal alcohol ablation.</p>

<p>I also told my doctor that, if at all possible, I would prefer to stay on medication and avoid any surgical treatment.</p>

<p>More good news: I will not have to see him or have another echo for six months.</p>

<p>I told the doctor I have been feeling great since starting Camzyos. My metoprolol dose was increased last month, and I have been sleeping much better. He said everything seems to have calmed down, and my gradients with exertion have improved greatly. So, no immediate decisions need to be made.</p>

<p>He also had a positive conversation with the cardiac interventionist and personally read my echo himself. It looked good, and he is pleased. I told him that I think staying consistent with my medication has helped. Lately, I have not had delays caused by the pharmacy needing certain tests before refilling my prescription, and I have not had any breaks where I was off the medication.</p>

<p>That means my main job now is simply dealing with the pharmacy and making sure I get my Camzyos on time each month.</p>

<p>So let&#39;s pray it keeps trending in the right direction. I actually feel normal for once.</p>

<p><a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:health" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">health</span></a> <a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:news" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">news</span></a> <a href="https://michaelmitchell.blog/tag:personal" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">personal</span></a></p>

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      <guid>https://michaelmitchell.blog/finally-great-heart-news</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 10 Jan 2026 03:35:15 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Path Forward a HCOM Update</title>
      <link>https://michaelmitchell.blog/the-path-forward-a-hcom-update?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Detailed pen-and-ink illustration showing a patient consulting with a cardiologist in a medical office. The patient, a middle-aged man with glasses, sits at a wooden desk, looking thoughtful. Across from him, the doctor wears glasses, a tie, and a stethoscope, leaning forward while writing on a notepad. On the desk lie medical charts and a tablet showing a heart image. Behind them is a wall poster labeled “Septal Myectomy” and “Alcohol Septal Ablation,” a bookshelf, and a window with blinds filtering soft light.&#xD;&#xA;&#xA;smallA serious medical discussion about heart treatment options between a patient and his cardiologist./small&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;This has taken me so long to post because I am still trying to process a lot of stuff and weighing a lot of pros and cons. I went to my HCM Cardiologist (Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Specialist) recently. I had an ECHO first then saw him. It was not good news from the ECHO. Even though I feel no symptoms with the Camzyos, I will need to take drastic measures in the future, though the timeline wasn&#39;t really given. But my gradients are not improving. Last time my gradient at Valsalva was significantly elevated with 100% obstruction. This time it was still elevated and still 100% obstruction at Valsalva.&#xD;&#xA;!--more--&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;You know that it&#39;s serious when the doctor comes in, gets close to you like he is a friend, softens their voice, and says while the medicine is keeping me symptom free, my pressures are too high and I need to start thinking of either a Septal Myectomy or an Alcohol Septal Ablation. If it was one of their family members, they would send them to a major center of excellence like Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic for the myectomy. They just started doing the Alcohol Septal Ablation at a local hospital and the doctor that does it was trained by a leading World Specialist. They could do the septal myectomy, but for this they are not a Center of Excellence, and having the procedure done at a Center of Excellence gives you less than 1% chance of death.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;So I have choices to make. I don&#39;t even know if my insurance would pay for me to go to one of these major centers, and then you&#39;re without a family network being that far away. Then there is my workplace. They recently terminated a long-time employee over FMLA documentation issues. So I don&#39;t have confidence that if I have to go out for a long time with the myectomy, I would still have a job. I know that FMLA is supposed to protect you, but it is a fear with the current political climate and business-friendly state laws.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;If I do the alcohol ablation, which I am leaning toward, I can get that done locally. This procedure is a controlled heart attack, and the scar tissue is supposed to shrink the muscle and lessen any obstruction so the heart can pump out more oxygenated blood. It has a much shorter recovery time: 3 days in the ICU and likely back to work in 2 weeks.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;The same doctor who was trained to do the alcohol ablation is also going to do a heart catheterization in December. The specialist says they need all the details about my heart they can get before making final decisions. My recent cardiac MRI showed 3.5% diffuse LGE, which indicates some fibrosis in the heart muscle. They want the cath to get a complete picture of what&#39;s going on with blood flow and pressures throughout my heart.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;Then there is going to be a new medicine, a second-generation med called Aficamten that should launch next year. It has a safer profile if the Government ever opens back up and gets approved by the FDA in December as scheduled. I could transition if my insurance approves it, and it has several advantages over Camzyos, but it still may just keep me asymptomatic.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;I have been having issues with my insurance company, mostly due to the REMS program requirements, and I believe this has not helped. I went almost 2 weeks recently trying to get my Camzyos for one reason or the other. I know that Camzyos has a half-life of 6 to 9 days staying in the system, but I was starting to feel like I used to at about day 6. So with my insurance also giving me problems with out-of-pocket determinations (one moment I am, the other I am not because of copay accumulator rules).&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;So with all these issues, I just have been in a kind of haze. I am leaning toward the alcohol septal ablation, but with only a 70 percent success rate compared to over 90 percent with the more invasive myectomy, I am not sure. Because the doctor made it a point that with the alcohol ablation, I could have another obstruction, then the go-to will have to be a myectomy, which is now riskier and trickier. I don&#39;t want to go through something where in the future they find this or that shouldn&#39;t have been done, like with my Cryoablation in 2016 for AFib. But they didn&#39;t know that Cryo was not ideal for HCM patients. Only RF ablation at specific spots should have been done. a id=&#34;footnote-1-ref&#34; href=&#34;#footnote-1&#34; title=&#34;Nedios, S. et al. &#34;Characteristics of left atrial remodeling in patients with atrial fibrillation and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in comparison to patients without hypertrophy.&#34; Scientific Reports 11, 12411 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91892-y - This study found that radiofrequency ablation is preferred over cryoablation for HCM patients with atrial fibrillation due to more advanced atrial remodeling.&#34;[1]/a  But Alcohol ablation has been around for a while.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;Why all the urgency? Because my chances of dropping over dead from sudden cardiac death (from arrhythmia) or acute heart-failure decompensation.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;Just for context, here is a plain explanation for what Valsalva is:&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;What is Valsalva? The Valsalva maneuver is a breathing technique used during an echocardiogram to stress-test the heart. You&#39;re asked to take a deep breath and bear down (like you&#39;re straining or trying to blow up a stiff balloon) while holding your breath. This increases pressure in your chest and temporarily changes how blood flows through your heart. In people with HCM, this maneuver often makes the obstruction worse and causes the gradient (pressure difference) to increase dramatically. Doctors use it to see how severe the obstruction really is under stress, since many HCM patients have worse obstruction during physical exertion or strain. The gradient measurements &#34;at rest&#34; show how your heart is doing normally, while the &#34;at Valsalva&#34; measurements show how bad the obstruction gets when your heart is under stress.&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;My ECHO History&#xD;&#xA;&#xD;&#xA;I&#39;ve had multiple echocardiograms tracking my HCM progression. The pattern shows persistent severe septal hypertrophy with dynamic left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. My gradients at Valsalva have consistently been significantly elevated, ranging from moderate to severe obstruction. My left atrium has progressively dilated from normal to moderately-severely dilated over time, which is concerning for long-term outcomes. Despite Camzyos keeping me symptom-free, the structural changes and obstruction patterns remain significant.&#xD;&#xA;Before starting Camzyos, I was very symptomatic with systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve and resting gradients that were quite elevated. The medication has improved my quality of life dramatically, but the underlying obstruction during stress remains a concern that points toward needing a more definitive intervention.&#xA;&#xA;ol&#xA;  li id=&#34;footnote-1&#34;Nedios, S. et al. &#34;Characteristics of left atrial remodeling in patients with atrial fibrillation and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in comparison to patients without hypertrophy.&#34; Scientific Reports 11, 12411 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91892-y - This study found that radiofrequency ablation is preferred over cryoablation for HCM patients with atrial fibrillation due to more advanced atrial remodeling.a href=&#34;#footnote-1-ref&#34;&amp;#8617;/a/li&#xA;/ol&#xA;&#xA;#health #life&#xA;&#xA;p style=&#34;font-weight: bold; font-size: 0.95em; font-family: Georgia, serif; color: #0c5c35; line-height: 1.8;&#34;&#xD;&#xA;  span class=&#34;tinylytics_kudos&#34;/span&#xD;&#xA;  💬 a href=&#34;https://remark.as/p/michaelmitchell.blog/the-path-forward-a-hcom-update&#34;Discuss.../a&#xD;&#xA;  a href=&#34;mailto:michaelm2@michaelmitchell.blog&#34; style=&#34;color:#0c5c35;text-decoration:none&#34;✉️ Email/a&#xD;&#xA;  🦣 a href=&#34;https://writing.exchange/@michaelm2&#34; rel=&#34;me&#34; style=&#34;color: #0c5c35; text-decoration: none;&#34;Reply on Mastodon/a&#xD;&#xA;/p&#xD;&#xA;!--emailsub--]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/tuVWY6PR.png" alt="Detailed pen-and-ink illustration showing a patient consulting with a cardiologist in a medical office. The patient, a middle-aged man with glasses, sits at a wooden desk, looking thoughtful. Across from him, the doctor wears glasses, a tie, and a stethoscope, leaning forward while writing on a notepad. On the desk lie medical charts and a tablet showing a heart image. Behind them is a wall poster labeled “Septal Myectomy” and “Alcohol Septal Ablation,” a bookshelf, and a window with blinds filtering soft light."/></p>

<p><small>A serious medical discussion about heart treatment options between a patient and his cardiologist.</small></p>

<p>This has taken me so long to post because I am still trying to process a lot of stuff and weighing a lot of pros and cons. I went to my HCM Cardiologist (Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Specialist) recently. I had an ECHO first then saw him. It was not good news from the ECHO. Even though I feel no symptoms with the Camzyos, I will need to take drastic measures in the future, though the timeline wasn&#39;t really given. But my gradients are not improving. Last time my gradient at Valsalva was significantly elevated with 100% obstruction. This time it was still elevated and still 100% obstruction at Valsalva.
</p>

<p>You know that it&#39;s serious when the doctor comes in, gets close to you like he is a friend, softens their voice, and says while the medicine is keeping me symptom free, my pressures are too high and I need to start thinking of either a Septal Myectomy or an Alcohol Septal Ablation. If it was one of their family members, they would send them to a major center of excellence like Mayo Clinic or Cleveland Clinic for the myectomy. They just started doing the Alcohol Septal Ablation at a local hospital and the doctor that does it was trained by a leading World Specialist. They could do the septal myectomy, but for this they are not a Center of Excellence, and having the procedure done at a Center of Excellence gives you less than 1% chance of death.</p>

<p>So I have choices to make. I don&#39;t even know if my insurance would pay for me to go to one of these major centers, and then you&#39;re without a family network being that far away. Then there is my workplace. They recently terminated a long-time employee over FMLA documentation issues. So I don&#39;t have confidence that if I have to go out for a long time with the myectomy, I would still have a job. I know that FMLA is supposed to protect you, but it is a fear with the current political climate and business-friendly state laws.</p>

<p>If I do the alcohol ablation, which I am leaning toward, I can get that done locally. This procedure is a controlled heart attack, and the scar tissue is supposed to shrink the muscle and lessen any obstruction so the heart can pump out more oxygenated blood. It has a much shorter recovery time: 3 days in the ICU and likely back to work in 2 weeks.</p>

<p>The same doctor who was trained to do the alcohol ablation is also going to do a heart catheterization in December. The specialist says they need all the details about my heart they can get before making final decisions. My recent cardiac MRI showed 3.5% diffuse LGE, which indicates some fibrosis in the heart muscle. They want the cath to get a complete picture of what&#39;s going on with blood flow and pressures throughout my heart.</p>

<p>Then there is going to be a new medicine, a second-generation med called Aficamten that should launch next year. It has a safer profile if the Government ever opens back up and gets approved by the FDA in December as scheduled. I could transition if my insurance approves it, and it has several advantages over Camzyos, but it still may just keep me asymptomatic.</p>

<p>I have been having issues with my insurance company, mostly due to the REMS program requirements, and I believe this has not helped. I went almost 2 weeks recently trying to get my Camzyos for one reason or the other. I know that Camzyos has a half-life of 6 to 9 days staying in the system, but I was starting to feel like I used to at about day 6. So with my insurance also giving me problems with out-of-pocket determinations (one moment I am, the other I am not because of copay accumulator rules).</p>

<p>So with all these issues, I just have been in a kind of haze. I am leaning toward the alcohol septal ablation, but with only a 70 percent success rate compared to over 90 percent with the more invasive myectomy, I am not sure. Because the doctor made it a point that with the alcohol ablation, I could have another obstruction, then the go-to will have to be a myectomy, which is now riskier and trickier. I don&#39;t want to go through something where in the future they find this or that shouldn&#39;t have been done, like with my Cryoablation in 2016 for AFib. But they didn&#39;t know that Cryo was not ideal for HCM patients. Only RF ablation at specific spots should have been done. <a id="footnote-1-ref" id="footnote-1-ref" href="#footnote-1" title="Nedios, S. et al. ">[1]</a>  But Alcohol ablation has been around for a while.</p>

<p>Why all the urgency? Because my chances of dropping over dead from <strong>sudden cardiac death</strong> (from arrhythmia) or <strong>acute heart-failure decompensation</strong>.</p>

<p>Just for context, here is a plain explanation for what Valsalva is:</p>

<p><strong>What is Valsalva?</strong> The Valsalva maneuver is a breathing technique used during an echocardiogram to stress-test the heart. You&#39;re asked to take a deep breath and bear down (like you&#39;re straining or trying to blow up a stiff balloon) while holding your breath. This increases pressure in your chest and temporarily changes how blood flows through your heart. In people with HCM, this maneuver often makes the obstruction worse and causes the gradient (pressure difference) to increase dramatically. Doctors use it to see how severe the obstruction really is under stress, since many HCM patients have worse obstruction during physical exertion or strain. The gradient measurements “at rest” show how your heart is doing normally, while the “at Valsalva” measurements show how bad the obstruction gets when your heart is under stress.</p>

<p><strong>My ECHO History</strong></p>

<p>I&#39;ve had multiple echocardiograms tracking my HCM progression. The pattern shows persistent severe septal hypertrophy with dynamic left ventricular outflow tract obstruction. My gradients at Valsalva have consistently been significantly elevated, ranging from moderate to severe obstruction. My left atrium has progressively dilated from normal to moderately-severely dilated over time, which is concerning for long-term outcomes. Despite Camzyos keeping me symptom-free, the structural changes and obstruction patterns remain significant.
Before starting Camzyos, I was very symptomatic with systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve and resting gradients that were quite elevated. The medication has improved my quality of life dramatically, but the underlying obstruction during stress remains a concern that points toward needing a more definitive intervention.</p>

<ol>  <li id="footnote-1" id="footnote-1">Nedios, S. et al. &#34;Characteristics of left atrial remodeling in patients with atrial fibrillation and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in comparison to patients without hypertrophy.&#34; *Scientific Reports* 11, 12411 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91892-y - This study found that radiofrequency ablation is preferred over cryoablation for HCM patients with atrial fibrillation due to more advanced atrial remodeling.<a href="#footnote-1-ref">↩</a></li></ol>

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