Apologies in advance for the long post, but I feel like I’m losing my mind here, and the detail is relevant.
We have an extensive, highly varied cardiac history, particularly on my mum’s side. She had obvious cardiac symptoms for years, even had a dodgy ecg when participating in a medical research project and was told she needed to follow it up, and completely ignored it all despite my pleading with her. At age 63, last summer she was immediately started on BP meds having gone to the GP for something else and found to have a reading of 180+ over 120. About 6 weeks after that, she had a funny turn in work which she tried to ignore, but was strong-armed to the nearest GP surgery by her manager, and her systolic was over 200. She was taken to A&E, found to have mildly raised troponin of 31, and her funny turn (her words) which had included chest and jaw pain turned out to be an NSTEMI. To this day I don’t know why they thought to keep her in ahead of an angio, as there weren’t really any obvious clinical grounds other than her BP and some PVCs, but they did, and when she finally got to the cath lab a week later, she required 4 stents and had a 100% blockage of one of the arteries (not sure which one as she couldn’t remember). The cardiologist said at the time it was miracle she’d only had a mild NSTEMI, not dropped down dead, and that the only time he saw vessels as furred as hers were in patients with diabetes, which she categorically doesn’t have. She also cane out of it with a fully preserved EF, so her heart had somehow adjusted to the lack of blood flow: all in all she was *incredibly* lucky.
Fast forward 10 months or so. She’s on the usual post HA clopidogrel, aspirin, a statin, bisoprolol (I suspect because of the PVCs whilst waiting for the angio), as well as ramipril twice a day as her BP was still high a few weeks post discharge. She also has GTN available, although insists she doesn’t have angina, purely because no one has said ‘you have angina’ even though she acknowledges she does get chest pain that responds to the spray. I’ve asked for the exact dosages, particularly of the bisoprolol and ramipril, but my mum is pretty dysfunctional, and she hasn’t given them to me. Much though I love her, she quite often only tells me what she wants me to know, or distorts/denies what’s actually going on. She’ll ignore anything that doesn’t support the narrative she wants to hear, and has real issues with the idea of having to take any medication. (This is all relevant, I promise).
Over the last 10 years I’ve become pretty medical minded out of necessity, I’ve had to due to my own long missed/misdiagnosed health issues, and that my 12yo has complex, life-limiting medical needs. We’re under 11 specialities between us, so if I didn’t know my stuff, or how to research properly, as much as I love the NHS, I’m pretty sure we’d have ended up in even more medical pickles than we have. Over the last couple of weeks, my mum has been reporting BPs as high as 170/100. She even woke up in the middle of the night feeling unwell and found it to be 164 over ‘something it shouldn’t be’ lying in bed. I subsequently found out yesterday that in her infinite wisdom, she decided to stop taking her evening meds just before last weekend - omeprazole, her statin, and the evening ramipril - basically because she didn’t want to be on ‘so much’ medication. She didn’t tell me at the time because she knew I’d kick her bum and explain to her in detail exactly what those meds are for and what could happen in the longer term, meaning that she couldn’t pretend she didn’t know it mattered when she stopped them. I have to take her word for it, but she says she’s been back on them all for the last 4 days, and out of 20 BP readings in the last 48 hours, only 7 have been below 130/90. She’s had a few in the 150s, a couple of 160s, and another 170+. To me, assuming she’s taking all her medication, this is not ‘ok’ for someone with her history, particularly when you consider she’s on an ACE inhibitor AND bisoprolol. It’s also not the first time she’s had highs, either, even when she was taking all her meds reliably, and I actually suspect they’ve been happening quite a bit for months. Having taken bisoprolol for SVT, even by itself at 2.5mg it plummeted my BP from an average, ‘perfect’ 118/78 to 70/40 on waking, with a pretty severe case of orthostatic hypotension for the lols. Last night, after I’d told her to speak to her GP on Monday about the ongoing hypertension, she phoned NHS direct and spoke to a nurse. This nurse apparently told her that her BP was absolutely fine even with her history, that it does vary throughout the day, and they’d only be bothered if the systolic was over 200...
In all seriousness, is it me? Have I missed something? Is my understanding of the situation fundamentally flawed? She’s now sitting there saying ‘well the nurse said it’s fine’, which plays in to what she wants to hear, but she also led the conversation with the fact she’s currently suffering quite badly with depression and anxiety, and from experience, that can inappropriately colour a lot of medical professionals’ opinions. If they don’t disregard you completely, they assume there’s some element of exaggeration or hypochondria. For 18 months (under the same health board area as my mum is now) I was told my symptoms were all in my head due to past depression and anxiety, when in actual fact I needed brain surgery, not once but twice. Prior to moving away, it reached a point where I felt like I could walk into our local, pretty atrocious A&E waving my severed arm around and they’d still probably look at me as if to say ‘he’s paranoid’, even though the evidence shows that I’ve only ever sought medical advice when there’s something wrong with me. I digress, but the main reason we moved was because of the poor medical care we were receiving, and I’m wondering if that’s also partly what’s happening here, although I can’t be certain how much of the history mum actually gave her, or how accurately. In any event, I currently seem to be the only person even remotely concerned that she’s got multiple readings for stage 2 hypertension when she had a heart attack less than a year ago and is fairly heavily medicated for blood pressure. Hence why I’m posting here.
Any and all thoughts and words of wisdom from you all are extremely welcome!