General Medical issues thread

Does anyone have any experience with a watch with fall warning. I know apple watch does but they need charging daily and looking for something for an elderly friend. She does have the pendant but if she knocks herself out then can't press the button
 
I think you will find that even the dedicated medical alert watches (so not apple or samsung smart watches) still require charging every 1-3 days. Anything with a inbuilt gps and 2 way voice drains small batteries pretty fast.

The pendant type have larger batteries.

That said i only need to charge my samsung smart watch every 4-5 days since i dont make calls from it.
 
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She does have the pendant but if she knocks herself out then can't press the button
New ones have an inbuilt falls detector that automatically ring preprogrammed phone numbers and will continue to call until someone answers.
look for "Falls alarms with inbuilt falls detector"
Pendants dont have to be charged as often as the smart phone based ones but generally a charging routine is preferable.

I believe most if not all of the pendant ones are one payment only without recurring fees
 
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Drain the fluid in the pleural space around the lung and not the lung itself. Not usually a space with volume in normal circumstances but a potential space that can be filled up with fluid. The fluid causes atelectasis - collapse of the lung preventing parts of the lung from expanding with breathing causing shortness of breath.
Draining it will make breathing easier..

Did MrEllen10 have AF before the mitral regurgitation repair
AF is common after mitral valve repair. the goals of treatment here is stroke prevention due to blood clots and slowing down the heart rate
The fluid is due to the inefficiency in heart pumping due to the AF
Thanks @Quickstatus your wealth of knowledge and information is most appreciated. You explained it better than the cardiologist (whom we are going to change after all this is sorted and finished).

Mr Ellen10 said when he donated blood years ago they said he had a bit of a funky heartbeat and wanted him to see a cardiologist. But the cardiologist said it was ok and come back in 12 months and then another 12 months etc. He was still right to give blood, plasma and platelets. This went on for a few years.

In the following years his GP was a bit concerned with his high blood pressure ( but not high enough for medication, just lose a bit of weight and exercise, which he did).

The problem with the mitral valve seemed to occur after he had pneumonia at the end of last year and coughed and coughed. Coughed up blood.
After that his breathing went downhill in the new year, where his GP started the wheels in motion towards the Mitral valve repair. Which his latest chest X-ray pointed out was good.

We see the surgeon next week before the cardiologist the following week. Hopefully the surgeon might sort out the AF.
 

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