Gabes wrote:that is a shame given that doctors are trained (?conditioned/?reliant) to link test results to symptoms and therefore to the treatment
if the test results dont match what the body is actually doing then i suspect they are at a loss on how to proceed.
as long as you feel well and there are no major symptoms like before the surgery, then how much reliance do you apply to the test results?
Maybe a little background information would clarify things, (to explain why we really don't know what we're doing with my treatment, in the first place - we're just guessing).
During that surgery, back in February, I apparently had so much blood loss, that during the long, drawn-out surgery, my heart ran short of blood, and I had a "mild" heart attack. It was classified as a NSTEMI, which is an acronym for Non-ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction. One way that heart attacks are detected, is by monitoring the "ST" segment of the graph plotted by an electrocardiograph. If the ST segment is elevated, then the indication is that widespread heart muscle damage has occurred, (a major heart attack). If the ST segment is
not elevated, (as in my case), then the indications are either unstable angina, or a "mild" heart attack, (where some heart tissue actually dies, but blood flow was/is not completely blocked). Heart muscle contains special proteins known as cardiac enzymes, which normally do not circulate in the blood, (unless a heart attack is occurring, or has occurred). Therefore, if those enzymes are detected in the blood, then that confirms that a heart attack has occurred, (or is occurring). rather than it being simply a case of angina.
With a NSTEMI, the ST segment of the graph is not eleveated, but a heart attack is confirmed by the leakage of coronary enzymes into the bloodstream.
Typically, either type of myocardial infarction, (either STEMI, or NSTEMI), is the result of a blockage of blood flow in the heart, (usually due to a blood clot). A STEMI is the result of a total blockage of blood flow, and a NSTEMI is the result of partial blockage of blood flow. My ST segment was/is not elevated, but toward the end of the long surgery session, coronary enzymes began to leak into my bloodstream, so
apparently, I had a NSTEMI. We are
guessing that hypovolemia, (low blood supply in circulation), was the cause. We don't
know that for a fact, though - we're just guessing.
Both TIAs that I've had in the past year, showed absolutely no signs that they were coronary event-related, (nor could we find any evidence that ischemia, (blood flow interruption), actually occurred during either event. However, since one-sided events are
usually closely linked with an interruption in blood flow to the brain, (either ischemia, or hemorrhage), we couldn't rule out the possibility, so as a safety precaution, I'm taking meds to lower my blood pressure, slow down my heart rate, etc. We're guessing - in order to err on the side of caution.
With so many guesses, about issues that can have serious implications, it probably shouldn't be surprising that "unexplained" changes occur in my lab results. Also, remember that I am taking megadoses of vitamins B-12, B-9, and B-6, and a lot of vitamin D, (a lot, considering that I also get a lot of sunlight, here in Texas). My vitamin B-12 level is at the top of the range, and here is possibility that the other two B vitamins that I'm taking might be out of range - I didn't think to have them checked. B-9, (folic acid), for example, is connected with the production of both red and white blood cells, and I'm taking 19 times the RDA.
Soooooooo, just about everything that plays an important part in my health care, these days, is strictly guesswork.

As long as I feel fine, though, and the lab results don't get too far out of line, I'm not going to lose any sleep over it.
Tex