Know, just the same signals.We have the same playbook??????
Remember there is no tape on Downing or Brown.
I was just joking that it's a slight positiveand?
Mayo Clinic says recuperation time for an ablation is "up to eight weeks". So partial season participation may not be a pipe dream.If diagnosed by ECG, it could be prolonged QT syndrome or Wolff-Parkinson-White.
My guess would be WPW. It is frequently treated with an ablation procedure to burn the accessory electrical pathways and is pretty standard treatment with a good success rate. Not sure what the recommendations are for resuming high level competitive sports.
Yes if you are old and debilitated with significant health problems up to 8 weeks might be just right. He is young and healthy otherwise and between the time of his procedure and the Iowa State game is at least 6 weeks. That is plenty of time to recover.In fact he will likely only needs 4 weeks.
Definitely, time for changes has come, and not just some piddlin' graduate assistants or such-like.Not for nothing but Kenny Hill dropped in their lap. Its been a [ Cumbie’s red zone playcalling ] show since Boykin left. That is a fact.
Look all this discussion is based upon the idea that this was an ablation procedure. No one has said it was so all my answers are mere conjecture.
That being said he will need to pass serial EKG's and probably some form of a stress test.and an echo cardiogram along with the usual blood tests. This is fairly standard stuff.
The reason that I am at the company I am with is because I was recruited to launch a new antiarrhythmic over 10 years ago now. Verapamil (in various formulations) was one of my first meds when I entered this industry and there's not too many of us left around with dysrhythmia marketing experience. I'm not sure you can find anyone at all left in pharma with amiodarone marketing experience. There's plenty in the pacing device industry still around. I have worked with electrophysiologists in Oklahoma, North Texas, Arkansas, New Mexico, Colorado and about half of Louisiana. What always amused me about ablation therapy (for afib which was my primary indication) was how certain every card was about the efficacy of their technique and yet how often the procedure failed or produced sub-optimal results. Now it's been over a decade since the last time I was in the Heart Rhythm Institute and places like that so I'm certain that there's been some awesome advances and as you say, this is all speculation as to the procedure. The follow-up protocol you describe is familiar.
so what you are saying is there is a chance you and your team in the next three weeks can develop a pill to fix max?
Nope
fair enough, how and appreciate the info from you and palliative.
how about something simpler like a tablet to help the frogs put the ball in play when they have a runner on third with less than two outs?
oh, i know it is you who has been jamming needles in the right elbow of an osuna voodoo doll