Yes, heart problems. A few years ago he had a blockage that was fixed with a stint and he was fine. About a month ago, he had chest pains and was short of breath. My parent's went to the ER where his EKG and enzymes were all normal. They admitted him overnight though.
13 years ago, my grandmother (his mom) had almost the same symptoms and her EKG and enzymes were normal. They sent her home with chest pains and she died three days later suddenly. This was the same day my dad had called and doctor telling him that she still had chest pains and he was concerned about her and her stress test. The doctor said that her condition wouldn't change until the next day - the day of her appointment. Well it did.
Anyway, back to my dad. I mentioned what happened with my grandmother to the doctor and she scheduled a stress test for the next day. At the very end of the test, he had the same symptoms and apparently gave everyone in the room quite a scare. That evening he was diagnoised with Ventricular Tachycardia which is a fast heart rhythm that starts in the lower part of the heart (ventricles). If left untreated, some forms of ventricular tachycardia may
get worse and lead to ventricular fibrillation, which can be life-threatening. (Thanks Webmd for that information!)
Now, after finding out what was wrong, I researched it more and found out that this can cause sudden death and won't be picked up on an EKG unless the person is having an episode at that exact time the EKG is done. Now we are wondering if my grandmother had the same thing and we just never knew it.
I'm very thankful that it was discovered and can be controlled with medicine. He just finished wearing a monitor for two weeks and so far so good.
He loved teaching special education. My twin sister is also a special education teacher but in a different district.
Although he loved teaching, he was extra relaxed today because he had no paperwork to do! He even read yesterday's newpaper today! So far he's loving retirement...granted it's about 24 hours old!