: Chapter 28
My Darling Bride
The next day, I take off the paper gown and slip my bra and blouse back on. Iâve just gotten settled into the chair inside the doctorâs office when Dr. Shultz, my cardiac surgeon, comes in. Around forty, heâs balding and thin, with a kind face. Heâs holding papers in his hand, results from this latest EKG, I presume.
Itâs not my first visit here since my surgery. I did my postop appointment here and another follow-up. After my heart did something weird at the beach, I came back in for more tests, blood work, a urinalysis, x-rays, an echocardiogram, and a stress test.
He takes a seat across from me, and I clench my hands. âAs previously discussed, we used cryothermal energy to make several precise modifications to your heart tissue in the left atrium. These cuts formed a web of lines that became scar tissue. This scarring works to block the irregular electrical signals from your heart. The ones we placed in the first procedure werenât adequate. It has improved your diagnosis, this is true, but thereâs a few places we missed. This isnât uncommon. Only about fifty to seventy percent of mini mazes are completely successful.â
I nod, chewing on my bottom lip as the news sinks in. I swallow. âSo whatâs next?â
âWe could try medications, but they didnât work before.â
âTrue.â
âSeveral patients require a second mini maze, which are more successful. I donât recommend that you wait. Every day you experience an episode weakens your heart. At this time youâve only had a few brief episodes, but you donât want to remain in an A-fib status for longer than forty-eight hours. We want you around for a long time, Emmy.â
âYes.â My brain races with what needs to be done to get ready for surgery. Iâll need to prepare Babs and Jane at the store. And Graham? Heâs got football season approaching. The last thing heâll want is an invalid wife. Not that it matters.
I study my hands in my lap, twisting them.
âA second procedure has a higher success rate, so that is what weâll focus on, yes?â He pauses. âAre you all right, Emmy? Do you feel light headed?â
I glance up. âNo. Iâm fine. Just other things going on in my life.â
âI understand. Itâs not the news you wanted to hear. You do need to avoid stress. Is that possible right now?â
Ha. âIâll try.â
âLike before, weâll make three to six keyhole-shaped incisions on either side of your chest, around your ribs and under your breast area. Weâll insert the device through those holes to reach your heart. Your heart will never stop beating.â
âI remember.â It was a fear of mine that it might stop and never pick back up.
âThe surgery will take about three hours, and then weâll put you in ICU for monitoring. If all looks well, youâll get a regular room and can be discharged in three days. Your risks are bleeding, infection, stroke, pneumonia, heart attack.â
âLast time, I went back to work after a few days at home. Did I mess it up somehow?â
He frowns. âNo, but you shouldnât have. Sometimes it takes a couple of days for the anesthesia to completely wear off. I suggest you wait and see how you feel, but at least wait a week before you go to work. The nurse will give you a list of things you shouldnât do, such as lifting, care of the incisions, et cetera. Sheâll also get your surgery scheduled, all right?â
âHow many of these can I have? If this one doesnât work?â
âSome people have several over their lifetime. Weâll get it right this time, Emmy.â He comes over and pats me on the shoulder to reassure me, but that dread from earlier has settled deep in my bones. The bad premonition I had came true yesterday: Graham and I are over.