The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Better diagnosis and swifter treatment for women under healthcare blueprint

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Her baby had a touch of jaundice after he was born – and that saved Sarah Anderson’s life.

The Gaelic teacher, 39, from Mull, almost died after suffering heart failure after having her baby. Around 200 women each year have heart problems linked to pregnancy, known as peripartum cardiomyop­athy, or PPCM, one of the conditions highlighte­d in the Scottish Government’s blueprint to improve diagnosis and treatment for women.

Sarah said: “I’d already had a good pregnancy with my son Archie who is now six, and there were no heart problems in my family so it was the last thing I, and everyone else thought of, when I became ill during my pregnancy with Hamish two years ago. I was only 37. I’d always been reasonably fit and active. But my legs would swell up and the exhaustion was overwhelmi­ng.

“I’d go back and forward to Oban for all the usual medical checks every pregnant woman gets but every time I saw a different midwife.

“I’d raise concerns at the difference­s between the pregnancie­s, but it was explained away as nothing to get too worried about.”

Sarah and Hamish remained in Raigmore Hospital after he was born because he had jaundice, and Sarah says it was this that saved her life. Doctors realised something was wrong, first suspecting preeclamps­ia, but no one initially thought of heart problems.

As concerns mounted Sarah was transferre­d first to Paisley and then to Glasgow’s Golden Jubilee Hospital, which specialise­s in heart trauma.

Sarah’s heart was significan­tly enlarged and was only working at a fraction of its capacity.

Sarah said: “A healthy heart would pump out 70% of the blood going through it. I was told that mine was only managing 20%. I was stunned.

“I’d no history of heart disease and nobody in my family had previously suffered heart problems.

“It was hard to take in just what a lucky escape I’d had. If I hadn’t had to stay in hospital longer after the birth because of Hamish having jaundice, I could just as easily have gone home and probably have continued undiagnose­d with possibly tragic consequenc­es for me and my family.”

Another teacher Roisin Falconer, 46, from Edinburgh, suffered hormonal changes during her last pregnancy which caused one of her arteries to tear open just five months after she had given birth to her daughter Isabella, now 8.

Just like Sarah, she dismissed the breathless­ness and crushing pains in her chest and arm as tiredness.

She said: “I was cleaning up when it happened, and the pain got so bad I realised that I had to call emergency services. But when the paramedics arrived, they too saw a stressed out mum of three young girls instead of a woman with heart problems.

“One of the doctors actually asked me if I’d been taking cocaine because they couldn’t get their head round how a petite, thirtysome­thing mum of three with no previous history was presenting with serious heart issues.

“All of us need to wake up to the awful fact that these deaths do happen, and stop associatin­g heart problems with the elderly.”

Specialist heart nurse Maggie Simpson said: “We don’t want to scare or alarm women. But we do need to make them realise the real danger to them if they don’t recognise the signs, take the appropriat­e action and seek medical help.

“Sarah and Roisin are among the 200 or so pregnant women we see each year who are affected by heart problems during pregnancy and 75% of the small number of mums we sadly lost didn’t even know they had a heart problem.

“We’d like to make women more aware of what to look out for, breathless­ness, high blood pressure, chest pains and swollen ankles so they recognise them and don’t always dismiss them as being part of pregnancy.”

I raised concerns but it was always explained away. Then I suffered heart failure

– New mum Sarah Anderson

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 ??  ?? Sarah Anderson in Edinburgh with sons Hamish and Archie and below, right, specialist heart nurse Maggie Simpson
Sarah Anderson in Edinburgh with sons Hamish and Archie and below, right, specialist heart nurse Maggie Simpson

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