cj
Bluelight Crew
I've gotten myself into some shit this time Doc. I may have endocarditis or some other kind of infection.
I relapsed on heron a week ago after 2 months softly clean. I contaminated the shot with my own saliva and used a nasty cotton to filter with. 2 days (a week ago today) later i began having chest pains, running a temperature of 99.5F measured rectally and feeling sick overall. This has continued for almost an entire week. Yesterday I went to a local walk in clinic. After explaining my symptoms and getting a brief exam he decided to send me on to the Emergency Room. For he felt like I needed immediate lab work and an ultrasound of my heart to rule out endocarditis. So he called the ER and I went.
The doctor at the ER was a dick and dismissive but whatever I just wanted to be checked out. So they did an EKG and a CBC blood test. He said they both came back normal (specifically mentioning white blood cell count) and that I was not running a fever or if I was it was a very low one. So they discharged me as healthy. My chest pain is still there and I feel vaguely sick as well. Like I'm not curled up in the fetal position but I just sense that something is wrong. Do you have any advice? Should I get a second opinion? If I do where should I get it at? ER or a normal doctors office? I have insurance but I am just loathe to waste the time of the emergency room and I hate hospitals anyway.
In the meantime I got an appointment to establish a primary care doctor on September 1 but that's of no use right now. I am scared as the first doctor I saw yesterday said if I was his son he wouldn't be satisfied until they performed an ultrasound of my heart! To rule out endocarditis. I dunno wtf to do man. Right now I'm just waiting to see if I get sicker or not.
Also could you speak on the differences and warning signs of slow progressing endo vs fast progressing. And anything else you feel is relevant and helpful to the discussion. I had a lot of trouble finding reliable info on the subject. Which sucks because it's a common and very dangerous complication of all IV drug use.
I relapsed on heron a week ago after 2 months softly clean. I contaminated the shot with my own saliva and used a nasty cotton to filter with. 2 days (a week ago today) later i began having chest pains, running a temperature of 99.5F measured rectally and feeling sick overall. This has continued for almost an entire week. Yesterday I went to a local walk in clinic. After explaining my symptoms and getting a brief exam he decided to send me on to the Emergency Room. For he felt like I needed immediate lab work and an ultrasound of my heart to rule out endocarditis. So he called the ER and I went.
The doctor at the ER was a dick and dismissive but whatever I just wanted to be checked out. So they did an EKG and a CBC blood test. He said they both came back normal (specifically mentioning white blood cell count) and that I was not running a fever or if I was it was a very low one. So they discharged me as healthy. My chest pain is still there and I feel vaguely sick as well. Like I'm not curled up in the fetal position but I just sense that something is wrong. Do you have any advice? Should I get a second opinion? If I do where should I get it at? ER or a normal doctors office? I have insurance but I am just loathe to waste the time of the emergency room and I hate hospitals anyway.
In the meantime I got an appointment to establish a primary care doctor on September 1 but that's of no use right now. I am scared as the first doctor I saw yesterday said if I was his son he wouldn't be satisfied until they performed an ultrasound of my heart! To rule out endocarditis. I dunno wtf to do man. Right now I'm just waiting to see if I get sicker or not.
Also could you speak on the differences and warning signs of slow progressing endo vs fast progressing. And anything else you feel is relevant and helpful to the discussion. I had a lot of trouble finding reliable info on the subject. Which sucks because it's a common and very dangerous complication of all IV drug use.
Last edited: