VenaSeal by Medtronics Had Me at “No Anethesia” For Closing Patients Diseased Veins

13 05 2016

 Happy Goddess GirlAll I can say, is, WOW! I’m going to post my photo’s and I’m going to highlight my first hours, days and weeks for those who are considering a venous “ablation”, (a process which damages, shrinks, collapses or nearly destroys dysfunctional veins not needed by the body). There’s a great method used called Radio Frequency Ablation with a probe that heats the damaged vein to the precise temperature to collapse and damage the vein. A fantastic procedure, but it comes with having to numb the “access” sites with a lot of fluid called Tumescent. It’s designed to make the treatment as pain-free as possible. But once the procedure is complete, the patient leaves the office with loads of tumescent mixed with trapped blood and it takes days to eliminate and “ooze” out the anesthesia. VenaSeal doesn’t need or use an anesthesia. I popped up on the “procedure table” at Smalling Vascular Institute, in Overland Park, KS on Wednesday, May 11, 2016. I merely lifted my dress I had worn to work. Removed my dee’s. Was covered and prepped for a sterile field. The music was playing over the surgical room speakers. And the process began. I can discuss in greater detail as we go. But, let me tell you how great I felt after the medical team finished. I was cleaned of ultrasound gel and all of the marker spots mapping my veins that had extra pesky veins, called perforators and tributaries. Once complete, I was told I could put my shoes on and walk out. Looking down at my legs, there was one plastic bandage on each ankle. And I went back to work. The photo’s will show you, if you’re skeptical! So I’ll leave you tonight with my photo’s of my procedure on Wednesday. And I’ll add to my experience over the next days to let you know how it goes. What an incredible ground-breaking new procedure. I can’t say enough great things about this modern, safe and quick varicose veins or refluxing venous insufficiency condition many of us have, yet we cannot “see” the disease or feel burdened by the problems with our legs. So stay tuned. Here are some websites to help find information and to checkout other folks opinions. Hope it helps….

Kansas’ FIRST and ONLY Specialist Who is The Only Current Physician Treating Veins with VenaSeal Glue

Medtronic’s VenaSeal Closure Fast treatment system a few doctors are approved to purchase and use

 

Here you go with the tease……





Finding a sense of self while falling in love with Chattanooga, TN

13 05 2012

Happy Mother’s Day. A son working in Los Angeles after graduating college and a daughter about ready to embark on Manhattan for her own college experience. The nest gets more expansive as the trilling sounds lessen. Bittersweet is a new comprehension for me. The good news is when the nest is empty and I make the move to a smaller abode, I hope I am able to remain in the city in which I have always adored. I’m getting out and about more often. Living downtown, I’m able to walk out my door and grab a Starbucks Chai Tea and read the Chattanooga Times Free Press, walk to The Tivoli to enjoy the cascades of performances on a given evening, or sneak off to escape reality with a movie in the huge LEED Majestic 14 movie theater less than two blocks away from my front porch.

Today as I set off for a typical weekly trail run on Lookout Mountain, TN at the Craven’s House trail head. Getting things ready and while I was stretching, the view seduced me to take it all in. Really look at all the detail of a shiny city between small mountains where the Tennessee River runs through the middle of downtown. I’m on the rainy, tree canopied trail ready to set out for a nice run with my fellow trail runner, Ziggy, my trusty 20-month old Labrador Retriever. She and I take off for a 4 mile run and she chases the squirrels while my mind wanders about all sorts of things. Often a diversion for the uphill ascent and challenge of regulating breath, my mind thinks of the journey I’ve faced the past few years. I think of the people who have come from out of nowhere it seems, to help me or to offer fellowship. I think of the beauty the scenic city possesses. We make the two-mile mark and keep going. Briefly, I recall there is a loop back to Craven’s if I keep going. Ten miles into the run, soaking wet from rain, watching Ziggy approach her first deer and chase it into the dense green growth of the forest, I am coming full circle similarly to ending this last section of this loop on my run.

Two hours and twenty minutes, I find myself again at my SUV and the view of the city below. I am becoming the girl lost long ago slowly. And it’s the city of Chattanooga, the topography, the spirit of the people, the programs being installed and implemented are exactly the tools I needed to endure this tough journey in finding myself again.

Although not completely there yet, a precise career objective still looms, but I am full of happiness, appreciation, beauty and love all because of a place like I’ve not known before in the vagabond life I’ve lived. This place I’ve enjoyed for 7 years, the longest I have ever lived anywhere, has helped me reshape myself, face my fears, find new inspirational passions like trail running and has put a little kick in my step, especially when I walk Ziggy each weekday to greet others walking downtown and my favorite people on my mini journey to my morning ritual of reading the news and grabbing my Chai Tea. What a phenomenal city. I hope I am able to remain here the rest of my days.





Educated Women- Reaching Out To Other Women

10 05 2011

Wow! My twenty-two year union dissolving was tougher than I had ever imagined. At times, I thought I wouldn’t be able to survive and redefine who I am. But, with time, I have realized, I will.

Today, however, I am humbled and my heart goes out to another. I did not have to announce the break up my marriage in the public eye, as Maria Shriver and Arnold Schwarzenegger are currently sharing with the world. My “transition” or as I refer to it as a redefining of self, has been the slow progress and development of the writer within due to the encouragement of so many that have pushed me to continue writing. While Maria does not have the same situation in which I find myself, as she is an already proven author, she may however, be struggling like so many of us in our more mature years, in finding a new focus for her life. Time feels more fragile in our 40’s, our 50’s and beyond. We sometimes fret trying to figure out precisely what it is, that is to be and what we want to discard from our self-image from being a partner to a spouse for so long. Time and reflection along with open dialogue are what it takes to hone into what really matters in our heart and nourishes our soul. She, in that respect, is no different from anyone else.

I’m not naive here. I realize and agree that her name recognition may open many doors for her, her previous professional experience is stellar and would likely allow her to consider any of many options that most of us would envy. But understand, she truly is no different from you or me in that she has the heavy burden and obligation to figure out what it is, that she wants to do at this stage in life. Augmenting one’s “title’s” has always been a topic of confusion. We like the rhythm of the way our life flows and we resist change. This is nothing new. But, reaching out and finding support and ideas from others has never been easier due to the internet and social media. Hence, the reason for my blog.

We can all pay a physician to help us or a career counselor to advise us, but often what seems to work best is finding those that have similarly dealt with upheaval, joy and change but did so, gracefully and with great satisfaction. That is why I am blogging. That is why I am here. I have had countless friends, family members, acquaintances, colleagues, professional peers and the like, continuously pushing me to write on how I live my life with the ups and downs I’ve faced, the change that has always defined my life and the manner in which I have always seemed to evolve to be a better person than I was the moment before I embarked on the next issue in life. I think, without sounding arrogant, I have survived remarkably well and am content. But, make no mistake, I am always learning, amending, adding to, deleting, and contemplating various ways in which to handle life’s journey. There are no right or wrong answers when it comes down to the nano particles. Community and experience is what usually works best. How have you faced crisis in your life? Did you ever feel hopeless, scared or lost? Did time and reflection help? It’s an interesting question for this community here.