Okay, I’ll come clean: that headline is not really medically accurate in any way, and yet, somehow that’s exactly what happened to me. Or at least that’s what it felt like. What technically happened is that a few weeks ago I was one of the unlucky 30-per-million people every year who decide to dramatically rend their aortas – the big main hose taking blood from the heart to feed all of your body’s equipment – in a process called an aortal dissection.
Of the many and wildly varied things I learned from this whole mess, one of them is that there don’t seem to be many first-hand accounts of aortal dissections online. So I’m going to tell you all about mine. Because I also learned that this peculiar relationship we have – between me and you, yes, you– is very important to me, and I want you to know the truth about as much as you can stand to hear. So, get ready to roll your eyes at my over-dramatizing and grimace at the sheer biological grossness of it all, because I’m not going to hold back.
What Happened
It was a pretty normal Monday night, before it became very abnormal. The kiddo was on his VR headset, hanging out with some friends in some virtual whatever and making noises that sounded like Tuvan throat singing, but that was normal. My wife was at a friend’s house, and I was wrapping up work, and just did un-shocking stuff like have a lovely phone call with a friend and walked the dogs, which included a bit of running, because we have a new puppy who is, of course, a loon. Again, normal stuff!
I was down in my basement lair, wrapping up work stuff and putting my computer to sleep, grabbing my iPad to do some member birthday drawings and about to head upstairs. Right as I put my system to sleep, I felt this strange bursting sensation in my chest. It rapidly changed from a peculiar burst to what I can only describe as a sphere of pain, fuzzy on the borders but rapidly expanding inside my chest.
The pain sphere, which I imagined as a deep red thing, blurry on the edges, sort of like how we often illustrate stars when they become red giants. This glowing, pulsating sphere of pain then dropped, rapidly and determinedly, into my abdomen. At that moment my jaw began to hurt.
Something was very wrong.
Somehow I made it upstairs, which wasn’t easy, because the pain was so intense that it was difficult to focus on things and, you know, walk. My body wasn’t working quite like it normally does, and in my mind I saw my body’s dashboard lighting up like the Vegas strip, every light coming on and the check engine light not just on, but blinking rapidly, demanding attention. My mind was all warning lights and needles firmly nestled in the red part of the gauge and buzzers and klaxons announcing that things were going very, very awry.
Like an idiot, I found myself Googling “chest pain abdominal pain and jaw pain meaning” and a lot of similar combinations to try and figure out what was going wrong, like I might be able to do something about it myself. I texted “I’m having a medical thing” to my wife, and based on how I normally treat medical things (specifically, I ignore them with the sort of idiotic unearned confidence of a true dipshit), she knew that this was A Big Deal.
I was also terrified, financially, of doing something like taking an ambulance, because, well, you know how America works. Here, people in medical peril actually consider waiting for a ride instead of taking an ambulance–unlike the rest of the world, where ambulance is the default first, best choice.
My wife, Sally, who was on her way back home, was thankfully less stupid than me, and insisted I call 911 and get an ambulance to the house, stat.
[Ed note: I have a really good friend who is an ER doctor and as soon as he saw the scar he was like “Thank God for Sally” because the type of aortic issue that Jason had doesn’t give you very much time – MH]
At this point, I was feeling deeply weird. The abdominal pain was intense, and it was getting difficult to focus on things, visually. My eyes felt like they were no longer under full control of my brain, and my limbs seemed to be enjoying some independence as well. Moving was difficult. My brain seemed to have entered some sort of Safe Mode, where I was processing actions one by one and only capable of doing things slowly, methodically. It was very strange.
Sally arrived home and found me on our son’s bed, (he was upstairs, still being a goofball in some virtual space, and that’s good – I did not want him to see me like this) confused and in a lot of pain. I was on the phone with 911, and they told me to chew an aspirin, in case this was a heart attack, which it, spoiler alert, wasn’t.
Help Arrives
Soon the paramedics arrived, dodging the Changli parked on the walkway in front of my house, carrying with them some genuinely impressive hardware that, were I in a different state, I’d have wanted to scrutinize until someone firmly reminded me that, hey, we have real work to do. But I wasn’t in anywhere near that state.
The paramedics were incredibly capable and competent, doing tests and taking what I think was a chest X-ray in a remarkably small unit, assessing what the hell was going on with me. I’m not certain if they decided then that what was happening was an Aortic Dissection, but whatever they figured was going on, they decided that I needed to get to the hospital as soon as possible, so I was loaded onto a stretcher, commemorated in this photo:
I’m amazed how, well, normal I look in this picture. I’m making a “jeez, what a lot of fuss” face there, but the truth is inside, I was barely hanging on. I felt like I was controlling my body from a distance, via remote control, having been ejected from my usual driver’s seat because the cabin was filling with smoke.
Also, RIP my Volkswagen Beetle shirt, which I think was about to be cut off me. I miss that shirt.
From this point on, things start to get really strange.
I remember being in the ambulance, and I recall thinking about how fascinating these vehicles are, but I couldn’t really focus on any details because my vision was behaving very oddly. My field of vision was getting dark at the edges, and it was hard to actually look at things. My ability to focus as I normally did was gone, and the pain was quite intense. I felt like I was on some sort of square platform, which makes no sense, and then, somehow, I think I was then in the emergency room, on another square platform, which still makes no sense, and I was writhing around, getting more and more confused, feeling more disconnected feeling from my body.
I don’t want to be too dramatic here, but at this moment I really felt like systems were shutting down. I felt like my body had thrown a rod, and the engine was still turning even though one of the pistons was poking through a hole in the block. Oil was leaking everywhere, every warning light is on, and now things are starting to really break.
Was this what dying feels like?
Let’s Talk Aortic Dissections
Let’s pause here for a moment to explain exactly what was going on inside my chest, this Aortic Dissection. This isn’t a heart attack, as it doesn’t really directly affect the heart: it’s affecting the big hose that carries blood from the heart to all the organs and other important bits. The word “dissection” here is a bit confusing because we normally associate it with the careful disassembly of a funny-smelling preserved frog or something like that but what it really refers to is what is going on inside the aorta.
What’s going on inside is a lot like what happens to that lousy German fuel line that’s rubber on the inside and braided fabric on the outside; the inner liner of the aorta separates, and that makes a gap between the inner part of the aorta and the outer, uh, skin, and then blood flows in there, where it’s not supposed to go, and eventually that causes swellings of blood that rupture and burst and then there’s a whole mess of blood not going where it needs to go and everything goes to shit. Here’s a video that shows the whole process:
In my case, I was told the aorta tear went all the way down to my kidneys, so the whole length of the aorta was dissected/torn. That’s why I felt the pain drop into my abdomen, I think. But let’s get back to my exciting evening!
Pants Shitting And Other Excitement
As I writhed on that table, my chest and abdominal pain continued, and, horrifyingly, my bowels decided that they were done holding anything inside, so as I squirmed there on the table, I shit myself. Lavishly. It just sort of happened, my intestines letting go and a remarkably generous amount of waste filled my poor pants, in such quantity and with such force that you’d think it was the finale for a Broadway show called Pantshitter! It was awful and embarrassing, and whatever dignity I had left was ejected into those pants along with all that rich, creamery feces.
Incredibly, it gets worse. There was a very cross EMT or perhaps nurse or doctor or someone there with me, who was yelling at me or about me, and she removed my waste-filled pants, an act that I’m certain that person was not paid nearly enough to do.
Once my pants were off, I instinctively moved my hands to cover my junk, because, you know, I have over 50 years of life experience that has trained me to not show my junk in public, but as I did so the nonplussed EMT or whomever yelled at me “TAKE YOUR HANDS OFF YOUR PENIS!”
I was confused. What? Then I heard it again: “HANDS OFF YOUR PENIS!”
I’m getting yelled at for having my hands on my junk? What is this, Trader Joe’s? No! Does this person think I’m going to have one last wank before dying on that table? It was bizarre, but I was in no position to argue, so I abandoned modesty and moved my hands.
The edges of my vision were a strange pattern of blackness, an unexpectedly pixellated sort of darkness, and what remained in the middle was getting increasingly fuzzy. I was laying there, mostly naked, having just shat myself with the ruthless abandon of an animal, and something was still going very wrong inside my chest and abdomen. If there’s any moment that sums up what an aortic dissection is like, this is perhaps it.
The Cooling Down And Surgery
After this point, there’s not much I remember, as I was anesthetized in preparation for surgery, which included cooling my body temperature down to something in the 70s, a process I’m very happy to not have been awake for (it’s known as hypothermic circulatory arrest, and lets the heart stop pumping without cellular damage). I was told this process took longer than usual, something I like to attribute to either my warm heart or hot, humid sexuality, perhaps a combination of both. Or, it could be some metabolic weirdness caused by my near-constant intake of Diet Cokes.
I went into a three-hour-long surgery where a Gore-Tex and Dacron sleeve was used to replace the damaged part of my aorta – thankfully my valves were okay, which I’m told is good because the artificial ones just aren’t as good as the OEM ones.
After surgery came a full week in the ICU, where I was barely awake and an absolute octopus of tubes and wires. As I gradually was able to be more alert and active, I remember drinking some cold apple juice and every sense I had going into overload with the achingly intense pleasure of it all, the sweetness, the coolness, the wetness, the everything. If there’s more of this in life, then I want to live, dammit! Being in ICU gives you an ability to appreciate little things more than countless self-help books about mindfulness or whatever.
I also had intense hiccups for days straight, and they were so persistent and violent they made breathing incredibly laborious. The doctors thought the tubes draining fluid from my body were irritating my diaphragm, and let me tell you, those hiccups were terrible. For several nights I had to work to take each breath, and that’s no fun. Hiccups aren’t the innocent, good-time brother of the burp they like to let on to be. They can be evil, breath-stealing monsters if they choose to be.
Post-Heart Explosion Thoughts
If I took any one thing away from this whole experience, which may have included a near-death component, it’s that people are wonderful. Not all people, I suppose, but the people who seem to be in my life, the ones who reached out, the ones who set up that GoFundMe to help with the medical expenses, the ones who sent recovery stuff, like potent yet gentle packs of ass-wipes, the ones who texted and called and made me feel cared about and loved, even though for most of these people we’d only interacted online, and only talked about cars.
If more proof was needed that car people are, somehow, the kindest and most welcoming and supportive group of people joined by a common interest, then I think we settled that here. I’m humbled by the vast amount of kindness shown to me, a karmic debt I likely can never repay. It’s beautiful and something I’m never going to forget. It’s also a wonderful motivation for me to heal, so I can get back to writing ridiculous things about cars and deep, important works about taillights, the most significant of human endeavors.
The suddenness and unexpectedness of this whole nightmare isn’t lost on me. Everything could have just ended, right then and there, with no warning, no hints, no nothing. And there’s so much more I want to do in life! Life, for all its difficulties, most of which I feel like I’ve created for myself, is such a rich and dazzling and wonderful thing, complicated and beautiful and chaotic and rewarding and so full of messy, confusing love, in so many ways, reaching out to so many things, people and animals and concepts and, yes, cars, ridiculous wonderful cars that we write about here, that peculiar wheeled thing that has brought so many of us together in the first place.
It all has value and merit and is all capable of inspiring feelings of joy, and I love this absurd business of living, interacting with all the people I do every day, all of whom I think I love more than I even realize, and I am not remotely ready to give it up.
I’m not exactly an observant Jew, really, but one thing I’ve always liked about Judiasm is the strangely pragmatic approach to the afterlife. Judiac eschatology as I grew up understanding it was that after you die, you rot in the ground. It’s hardly a romantic or inspiring notion, but it sure does make this life we know we have more important.
This is it! This is all we get! There’s no point in planning for some afterlife because who the hell knows if there’s anything there? And that’s okay, because what we have here has so much potential, is such a rich and wildly varied array of experiences, and it’s worth cherishing. I’m so happy I get to keep going, experiencing this life.
My meds are kicking in and making it tricky to string together thoughts, but I think you get the idea. Aortic dissections, in case I wasn’t clear, suck, deeply and powerfully, and I hope no one reading these words gets within miles of one. I hope my likely inadequate description gives enough of an idea to sate your curiosity, and that is as close as you ever get to having your heart’s main hose explode.
Wow. I don’t really have the proper words to describe how glad I am that you’ve survived and have all your faculties still. Thank you for sharing this experience with us. I hope to never have anything like it happen to myself or my loved ones!
I’m so glad you’re healing and obviously on the road back to far from normal. I’ve been telling myself I’m scrolling for stories from “The Boys” but now that your byline is back I admit I was searching for words from the torch. It’s incredible that your internal sensations were so accurate during the dissection. I gotta imagine the “hands off penis” imperative was soft selling “stop spreading shit!”
I’m so glad you are still here.
Wow, holy hell dude, glad you made it through this, the world wouldn’t be the same without you. You’ve got plenty of life ahead of you, and I know you’ll make the best of it. For now, enjoy some much needed rest, you deserve it. Get well soon.
I can’t adequately express my wishes for a rapid and event-free recovery. Glad you’re still with us.
Glad to have you back, Jason!! Your writing is informative and humorous as always…and very insightful, too. (I’m a bit annoyed that a medical ‘professional’ would yell at you in such a vulnerable state though…)
It’s uncomfortable but I’ve certainly…spoken loudly, bluntly and firmly to a semiconscious trauma patient. Never with any heat, never anything I wouldn’t have been comfortable with them seeing video of later, but sometimes people with not enough O2’ll only do what you yell at ’em in small words, if it helps. And seconds seldom really matter but with this specific injury…
I would imagine such, uh, firm language to a patient in such a situation probably all translates to, “PLEASE STOP HELPING YOURSELF DIE. I’M TRYING TO PREVENT THAT.”
Dear Jason, my buddy way too far from Budapest,
This is a horrifying, yet very important, informative and truly Torch blog, which means we still have you. You beautiful brain is okay, and your piping is getting better. Sally was amazing, and so were your paramedics. It’s crazy for a Euro boy like me to realize once again you guys need to think about calling 911, but all is well, because you did. Going through this is only a touch harder than coming back from it. Thousands of people all over the world are here for you, and luckily, you are surrounded by family and friends. Take your time, there’s no rush just now. Safety mode has worked, rebooted Jason is back, let’s keep doing this shit.
Thanks, Mate! Glad to hear from you!
“likely inadequate description” – not at all, this was very detailed and informative, especially for the chaos in the moment. Glad the outcome wasn’t worse and that your spirits are strong!
Thank you for sharing Jason. Glad you are on the mend. And that line about OEM valves shows that your wit is fully intact.
There is truly no substitute for original factory equipment.
Glad you weren’t ready to be sent to the crusher!
Just had to add this: For a tuneful ode to pants-shitting, check this out from Frank O’ the Mountain: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNJj4foO-BE
Whilst reading this article, first I laughed, then I laughed until I cried, then I just cried.
(Perhaps some of y’all crode too.)
So glad to read more of your words, Torch. I suspect it will be a HAPPY New Year in your house.
Glad you can’t confirm that that was what dying feels like.
Oh, you know what I mean.
I’ll bet it feels one helluva lot like that, but with death at the end instead. Yikes.
I’m just thankful for everyone from Sally telling you to call an ambulance through the doctors and nurses who sorted you out and kept you going. Hard to imagine a future without your style of taillight illumination.
Glad you’re on the mend! Also feel slightly bad for laughing as hard at this as I did.
Lavishly.
Ugh, I understand the ambulance thing completely. Dad had a history of heart garbage, and…yeah. That simultaneously drilled into my head that it’s best to get things taken care of ASAP before they balloon into bigger, deadlier issues, and that the American healthcare system—especially emergency care, and even more so when it comes to an ambulance or life flight—should be avoided whenever possible because holy hell, it’s expensive. So, y’know, a nice conflicting decision paralysis whenever I feel really, really bad, but for better or for worse, one that tends to err on the “get it fixed now, sell Puffalump feet pics on the internet if you have to afterwards” side of the equation. (Well, and a vague sense of “maybe I should take better care of myself?”)
The entire system is just hopelessly broken. Glad y’all made the right call for an ambulance ASAP. This place is better with you in it.
P.S.: If you need me to set up a PuffyFans…lemme know, we’re here for you.
Jason, I’m truly overjoyed to to see that you’ve recovered enough to crank out some Torch-Style, informative and entertaining content! Kind of like finding an extra unopened present under the tree. Wishing you a happy and healthy new year!
Well Said Jeff!
Thank you Jason for providing the world with a description of this rare condition; am sure you have ‘paid it forward’ and this information will, someday, save someone else’s life.
Get well, and once you’re back to health, you’ll have time to write something about that facinating vehicle called an ambulance.
He should totally interview the EMT crew that took him in, and write a review of their rig.
I definitely agree.
I know that ER vehicles are utterly different in each country based on how things are done… So it could be an interesting topic.
Here in France they have almost everything you can find in a surgery room, and if needed they can ( at least in Paris and some other major cities ) ask for additional ressources ( parse : additionnal vehicles ) to perform open heart surgery on the curb is required.
( it’s also part of the military doctrine… Médecine de l’Avant… where the concept is to bring the hospital to the patient and operating on the field before moving them to the back for recovery )
My take of the american way f doing things is that their vehicles are equiped to try to keep the patient conscious and alive while it speeds to the hospital.
The one thing we should take away from this story is that the whole business of wearing clean underwear in case you have to go to the emergency room is worthless since you’re likely to shit your pants anyway.
Oh, and never get too attached to t-shirts. As soon as I noticed the Beetle shirt in the pic, I was like, welp…that WAS a nice shirt. RIP Beetle shirt.
When I took my wife to the ER I suggested she wear a pair of fresh clean undies.
She said no way. When asked why, she told me the underwear gnomes would just steal them.
Shit happens.
Good to see you writing again, Jason.
This story as you’ve told it is harrowing enough, can’t imagine living through it. But I’m glad you shared it with us.
I am curious if there are any tests to inspect the status of one’s aorta preemptively? I’ve feared aortic dissection more than a heart attack ever since John Ritter passed and this tale isn’t helping.
The world is better with you, Torch. To a speedy recover…..because the turn signal aficionado community isn’t the same with you on the sidelines!
So glad you made it and that you’re on the mend.
I keep envisioning the difference between professional doctors and car-forum DIY’ers.
Post: I have a dissected Aorta. How do I fix that?
All replies and doctor discussions would then fall into two categories.
1) questioning the diagnosis.
– Are you sure you have a dissected Aorta? That’s really rare. Have you ruled out a heart attack?
– It could be bad indigestion. I had that once and it also hurt really bad. You should rule that out.
– How did you diagnose that? You should convince me first before I offer any advice.
– What’s your make and model?!
2) Offering unhelpful while-your-in-there (wyit) advice.
– I don’t know about Aortic dissections, but you should have a quadruple bypass wyit, those need done sometimes, and you might as well.
– You should just replace the pump entirely. You’re probably still on the original!
– You know, if it extends into your abdomen, you should look into having your Gallbladder and Appendix removed. Those were put there from the factory, probably just for emissions, but they aren’t really needed, and are known failure points.
– Have some hernia mesh put in wyit! Aftermarket is better, and will last longer than the original factory parts.
Note that none of the doctors would have actually addressed your problem, or explained how to fix you.
Thank goodness they were professionals!!!
cotd
Glad to see you back! God bless!
It’s so great to see your byline again, Torch! I can’t wait to see your smiling face at some event in the new year, but take your time.
I’m not sure if it’s similar in Durham/Orange Counties, but Wake County offers an EMS subscription that covers any EMS or ambulance services for everyone in your household for $60 per year. So for the price of a couple bags of groceries you can at least remove that worry in the future.
Reading this was a breath of fresh air I needed badly. It’s so amazing how invested we get with people we have only interacted with online – you’ve been on my podcast twice, you’re a fellow car guy, a fellow Jew, and you bear a bizarre resemblance to my brother-in-law… and I’ve included you daily in my prayers since your aorta tried to pull the same crap my LT-1 powered Trans Am did a few years back. Except that Trans Am never wrote any in-depth tomes about eastern-European tail lights. Then again, that car was always falling short of expectations…
Either way, I feel a little guilty before devouring this article just because I haven’t hard a Torch fix in too long… and now I feel both misty-eyed and uplifted by getting such an amazing first-hand account of this harrowing experience and the strength you were able to draw from people who are typing comments on this page right now.
As a guy who happens to have a history of heart disease on both sides of the family, this hits hard. I’m so glad you’re still here and your perspective is inspiring. We’re ready for more adventures with chainsaws, Changli’s, rare Volkswagens and many, many tail lights.
Glad Torch is recovering ok. I tried googling how to prevent this for myself and it says lower blood pressure, I’ll add that to my new years resolutions as this does not sound fun. Why couldn’t we have 3 hearts like Octopi? Sounds like we got a raw deal.