Wow Robert.  You were very fortunate to have survived.  I have not heard of a 
"Greenfield Filter".  My sister-in-law has been having little mini-strokes or 
TIA's.  I will be seeing her soon so will mention this to her.  I'm sure all in 
the medical field know about this but i have not heard of it before.  

Heather in Calgary 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Robert Pall 
  To: marieke dufresne ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, May 01, 2009 7:57 AM
  Subject: RE: [TMIC] RE: tmic-digest Digest V2009 #373


     When I first came down with TM 11+ years ago after I was in rehab for 
about a week I developed a clot behind my right knee...they put me on Comidan 
and another blood thinner that they injected into my stomach....none of this 
helped as the clot broke and part of it went to my lungs and caused a pulmonary 
embolism (pain beyond belief)...the Drs said I only had a 50/50 chance of not 
dying....what saved me was the size of the clot and the fact that it went to my 
lungs instead of my heart or brain which would certainly have killed me. In 
order to prevent another clot from occuring I had the "Greenfield Filter" 
inserted near my groin. This filter does not prevent clots...but it does not 
allow a clot to go above your waist...effectivley making blood clots non life 
threatening.

  Rob in New Jersey



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  From: marieke dufresne [mailto:[email protected]] 
  Sent: Friday, May 01, 2009 9:38 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: [TMIC] RE: tmic-digest Digest V2009 #373


  RE: DVT, are Deep Vein Thrombosis. 

  Basically, CLOTS in the vein that block it and can also break away and travel 
up in your blood stream. Very dangerous as it can go to your lungs or heart or 
brain and this can kill you. When you get DVT they put you on blood thinners to 
get rid of them and then usually you have to take another type to decrease the 
chance of getting more. People who do not move around much/are paralyzed tend 
to get them. It is important to try to move around as much as possible. If you 
can flex your ankle do it every hour to keep the blood moving so that it is not 
in stasis. You can also wear TED stockings during the day, these help as well. 
Keeping your feet elevated too. You'll know if you have one, there will be 
pain, redness, swelling in the area it is situated in. You may also see a large 
bruise. 
  People who fly long distances and don't get up to walk around are also prone 
to getting one.

  Marieke RN
  TM @T1 since March 2004



  --Forwarded Message Attachment--
  Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2009 21:07:25 -0500
  From: [email protected]
  To: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [TMIC] wow, you work too hard Trudy


  Barbara,
  Your situation seems to be the closest to my situation that I have read yet.  
I am referring to your paragraph 2.    Also, use
  baclofen (2 at dinner, 1 at 8:00pm) and have no problem sleeping too.   What 
would we do without really good husbands!?!.

  You mentioned DVT's in your legs.   What are those?   Are they painful?  I 
have never heard of that.        Janice



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