What should I do if my doctor is hesitant to refer me to a cardiologist for calcified coronary artery plaque? - #30033
I was recently sent for a CT Lung scan by my primary physician. The results came back that my lungs were fine, but they noticed a severe calcified coronary artery plaque. I asked my doctor to refer me to a cardiologist. So I can get out in front of this. They seem to be hemming and hawing about doing this. Any suggestions?
How long have you been aware of your coronary artery plaque?:
- Just found out from the CT scanHave you experienced any symptoms related to your heart or chest?:
- Shortness of breath during activitiesWhat is your current level of physical activity?:
- Not sure about my activity levelDo you have any history of heart disease in your family?:
- No family historyWhat other health conditions do you currently have?:
- High blood pressureHave you made any lifestyle changes since learning about the plaque?:
- Yes, improved diet and exerciseHow do you feel about the urgency of seeing a cardiologist?:
- Very urgent — I want to see one as soon as possible100% Anonymously
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Doctors' responses
Hello
Severe calcified coronary artery plaque on CT means there is significant atherosclerosis (hardening and buildup in the coronary arteries), and with your shortness of breath and high blood pressure, it is reasonable to want a cardiology evaluation. Even if the lung scan was not a dedicated heart test, this is not something that should simply be ignored.
You can calmly but firmly ask your doctor why they feel a referral is not needed and whether additional testing such as a coronary calcium score, stress test, echocardiogram, or cardiac CT angiography would be appropriate. If they still hesitate, you are absolutely allowed to seek a second opinion or contact a cardiologist directly, depending on your healthcare system and insurance rules.
In the meantime, continue the lifestyle changes you started: control blood pressure carefully, avoid smoking, maintain exercise within your tolerance, improve diet, and discuss cholesterol-lowering treatment if not already addressed. Many people with significant plaque benefit from statins and risk-factor management.
Seek urgent medical care immediately if you develop chest pain, worsening shortness of breath, dizziness, fainting, pain radiating to the arm/jaw, or symptoms at rest.
Take care Feel free to ask
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