I'm 50 years old and have a PFO with a right to left shunt (discovered after an ischemic stroke). Did I necessarily start with a left to right shunt? Is this the only way a R-L shunt could occur? Because, man, that looked scary!!! You'd think I would have had noticeable symptoms! I also read that I have an ISA, intraseptal aneurysm, which might complicate my closure options. Are ASD and PFO the same thing? I've watched several videos and still haven't found the answer to that question.
Great explanation, thank you very much.
You're welcome :)
Such a great video 🙂 thanks
thank you 🙏
Thank you, it was helpful
you're welcome
Thank you it is great explanation
you're welcome
Very good work
thank you
The Best!
thank you
I'm 50 years old and have a PFO with a right to left shunt (discovered after an ischemic stroke). Did I necessarily start with a left to right shunt? Is this the only way a R-L shunt could occur? Because, man, that looked scary!!! You'd think I would have had noticeable symptoms!
I also read that I have an ISA, intraseptal aneurysm, which might complicate my closure options.
Are ASD and PFO the same thing? I've watched several videos and still haven't found the answer to that question.
How are you doing?
Thank you! very helpful. Wish it was a real-human voice tho 😅
thank you... 👍🏻
Please give me more explanation for ecg findings
Please do mention which specific finding in ECG do you want more explanation...
@@MedicalSnippet that of right bundle branch block , prolonged PR interval and axis deviation
This article explains it well...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5661326/
Tq
You're welcome
Wow
thank you
That was great. But now im dizzy
thank you... hope dizzy will settle after repetitive watching...👍🏻