My Medical Emergency Overseas Reminded Me Of My Purpose
There are moments in life when we are reminded of our purpose and why we keep striving to make a difference. I had one of those while traveling overseas in Japan and South Korea.
For three weeks, I explored many cities in Japan and went on to Gwangju, South Korea for a special family occasion. Both countries blew my mind. Both places were equally stunning with misty mountains and the water was so clear that you could see through it. The last thing I wanted was to allow my health to ruin such an experience, especially when I was with my family.
The problem with having complex health challenges is that you can’t predict or control when something does happen. In every moment, I try to stay present and focus on others and get out of my head.
A few days before my family event, I ate out at a raw restaurant three and a half hours outside Gwangju. I tried exotic foods from the ocean and I was adventurous with my palette.
As the evening was winding down, my symptoms became suddenly overwhelming. First, I broke out into hives and thought I was having an allergic reaction and told myself to suffer in silence. Not long after, my heart rate radically dropped and I could feel my heart struggling to work. The beats were suddenly different with prolonged breaks between them.
Discretely, I kept quiet about my distress and went into the other room. My mom was the first to follow me out, and I can’t remember much of what happened after that. My calves, ankles, and feet were swollen and icy cold and were a purply blue. I wasn’t getting blood to my head, but being in a public place prevented me from elevating my feet higher than my heart.
For over an hour, I was in and out of consciousness and was having so many symptoms that I couldn’t keep track of them all. I kept saying and hoping that they would pass and I’d naturally recover. I was having bradycardia and tachycardia and not bouncing back. A family member on my sister-in-law’s side revived me by trying to get blood to my head and it worked. But, my heart rate still wasn’t normalizing and the swelling wasn’t going down.
We were in rural South Korea and nobody knew how far away we were from an emergency room. My sister-in-law kindly translated everything and helped us call the paramedics, which couldn’t speak a word of English. In fact, the paramedics looked very young, but they knew of DiGeorge Syndrome or 22Q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.
The experience reminded me of what my purpose has been over the last fifteen or so years; to keep raising awareness of 22Q11.2 Deletion Syndrome or DiGeorge Syndrome. To keep getting the public to learn about it and talk about it on a broad national and international scale.
What complicates all of this is that the severe bradycardia and my heart rate dropping too low has happened several times in the last year since my second bout with Covid-19 last summer and it’s another layer of complexity to my already complex circumstances. New symptoms came up in the recent few months, the swelling in my legs, ankles, and feet.
Swelling in the extremities is a sign that heart failure is becoming more severe. I was in the early stages and I’m not sure what stage I am in now, but my recent echocardiogram didn’t look nearly as bad as I thought it would. My ejection factor is in the normal range though on the lower side.
I just underwent a procedure to have a loop recorder implanted in my chest which will detect and generate data 24/7 of what my heart is doing. On top of being in the early stages of heart failure, I have Mitral Valve Prolapse and my cardiologist also wants to study what’s happening there.
As always, a new diagnosis, for me, means that I must take more action to better my health. I signed up for a membership at my local gym. I am getting into light swimming again, I’m still doing yoga regularly, and I walk every day. I know I can’t prevent or change what’s happening to my heart, but I can still strengthen it and be more careful with it. That’s what I plan to do.