I talked with my mom. She was a nurse anesthetist for forty years. She is very familiar with it. Most older people will eventually develop Frank’s Sign. She has it now. My dad had it by the time he was forty.
It can be an early indicator in younger people. One of the articles mentions it’s not as useful in people over 60.
No Frank’s sign here. My family tends to live a long time so long as we don’t smoke cigarettes or drink to excess.
Though come to think of it, my dad is a 75 y/o Viet Nam vet with Agent Orange exposure and adult-onset asthma, who has smoked forever, and was a volunteer firefighter besides. He’s doing well, to be honest. No hypertension – actually low blood pressure. Some people are just tough, I think.
Yeah, my family has autoimmune problems and some really bizarre allergies (who’s allergic to turkey? My cousin.), but the hearts work fine. Go figure.
I do not have Frank’s Sign, although I do have hypertension, albeit well controlled by medication.
My family tends to be pretty long-lived, if we don’t smoke and take our BP meds. If I was a woman and do not smoke, chances are I’d be living into my 90s- grandmother and a couple of great aunts made it into their 90s, and another grandmother made it into her early 80s, despite having been an insulin-dependent diabetic for the last 30 years of her life, AND smoking 2 packs a day until she was 70. I can’t help but think she’d have made it closer to 90 without the smoking.
I have Frank’s Sign but compared to the Google images pics, mine is quite minor. It also seems like it is at least in part due to years of dragging my earlobes down with earrings, since the crease goes directly through my ear piercing, and is much more visible if I wear dangling/heavy earrings.
Anyway, I have a cardiologist (because I had to get checked out to make sure I was in good enough shape for general anesthesia when I had my cataract surgery) who wants to keep up with me every 1-2 years because I have 4 leaky heart valves (3 minor, 1 moderate). But he seems to think I’m fine, and in particular noted that there has been no change in the degree of leakiness over the past few years.
So I’m good. But I wish I didn’t have it. I try not to think about it much, because really, what difference does it make to me at age 58? I exercise, don’t smoke, am not overweight, and generally try to lead a pretty healthy lifestyle, which is what I’d be doing with or without the crease.