A Room With a Viewby Jim

Sun
15 Feb 2026
10:02 am
1

The ER nurse wasn’t kidding, the view from the 6th floor rooms isn’t half bad. The couch bed isn’t particularly comfortable and the WiFi in the room is a bit lacking, but I really can’t complain. They’ve been taking very good care of us.

So, there’s lots to cover. The plan is to keep her here for a couple days to run additional tests. They want to do an MRI, but they may not be able to. Her pacemaker was placed only a few years ago, so it’s actually compatible, but her leads are older and some of them were placed before they used MRI compliant hardware, so that might be a deal breaker.

We got a visit from the stroke team this morning, and Dr. Schwartz told us about the situation. He says they’d like to get the MRI because it would give them clearer imaging which should give them a better idea of how old the infarctions in her brain are so they can conclude whether they were induced by her procedure on Tuesday or if they’re older (or newer). They can also see the extent of the damage better with an MRI. The infarctions are located in her cerebellum, which is why some of her dexterity seems to be diminished and sometimes her words are hard to find. I think the neurologist said there was another one higher up, but it was really tiny. The biggest ones are in the cerebellum. Dr. Schwartz said that recovery prognosis is very good and he believes she’ll eventually be able to make a full recovery. He also brought up her status on the transplant list. She may not be eligible for a short time, since recovering from a stroke can make you less capable to recover from transplant, or it may make the transplant recovery more complicated because we’re compounding recoveries. Her location on the list is low enough that it probably won’t really be a factor, but he brought it up.

If they can do the MRI, they will probably wait until tomorrow, when the regular A team can do it because it’ll be a little more complicated than your regular MRI (instead of the weekend team). Also, I think they want some of the regular congenital heart team to be involved, and they won’t be in until tomorrow. If they can’t do the MRI, they’ll do another CT scan to see if they can see any change from the one they did yesterday. We’re actually really blessed because Angie has a CT scan from a year ago when she accidentally dropped a bottle on her head while she was at Target. She was there alone, and she was trying to get something from a high shelf and it fell and hit her on the head. After it happened (it made a lot of noise), people came and when they saw the blood (head wounds bleed a lot), an off-duty EMT came up and insisted that she go to the hospital. Because of that, we have a baseline CT scan to compare against. At the time, I never would have thought a bottle wound to the head would have been a blessing to be grateful for, but today, I see things differently.

We’re expecting a visit from the Electro Physiologist (EP) to interrogate her pacemaker to see if there are any abnormal rhythms or anything that might correspond to the infarctions to see if there could be some other explanation besides the procedure from Tuesday. Also, if there is an MRI coming up, apparently they need to change some settings to put the pacer into MRI mode so it won’t be affected by any interference during the scan. Also, during her EKG today (and I presume yesterday as well), they noticed that her pacemaker is pacer her differently than usual. Normally, it reads her atrium and paces her ventricle, but not it is pacing both atrium and ventricle. It is doing what it is designed to do, but it is a recent change that needs to be investigated. The EP will look at that.

We’ll also be visited by an occupational or physical therapist to do another evaluation (Angie is getting pretty good at touching people’s fingers and her nose) and to give her some exercises to do after going home to help recover her dexterity and so she can get her old handwriting back.

They did an ultrasound of her heart to look for any abnormalities, but it was done bedside in the ER, so they want to do a full echo with a team who specialize in that to look for any anomalies. I don’t know if they’ll use the weekend team or wait until Monday for that one.

We’ll also be visited by the cardiology and congenital cardiology teams. (I feel like Jacob Marley telling Scrooge who will be visiting tonight.) We’ve already been visited by a resident from the regular cardiology team, but I think the others will come to talk to her about what it means from the cardiology perspective. I’ll take notes again and report all the news as it comes.

Thanks for tuning in and thank you for your love and concern for us through this. We really appreciate it. Please feel free to leave a comment for Angie on this post, I’ll show them to her. Also, if you aren’t already subscribed, you can get email notifications when there is news.

Comments (0) Trackbacks (0)
  1. Jon
    11:04 AM on February 15th, 2026

    I’m always so impressed by your perspective, Jim – and how you two are such pros at taking all of these really challenging things in stride and with poise. Sounds like there’s a lot of really caring people at the hospital too making sure to leave no stone unturned. Love you both so much – happy to swing by to see you soon with anything you might need me to bring! ::hugs::

Leave a comment

No trackbacks yet.