Owen
Member
Hi everyone.....
Loving this forum, lots of wonderful information here. I'm looking for some answers.
March 21st, 2013. OHS to repair ascending aortic aneurysm at 52mm, and replace bicuspid aortic valve with mechanical. Had been having symptoms for about 6 months previously, including frequent shortness of breath, fatigue, muscle weakness, some dizziness/lightheadedness, chest pains that radiated across shoulders, down left arm.
About a week post-op, I had a bout of a-fib that wouldn't stop, lasted close to 3 hours. They finally put me out and shocked me, returning me to sinus rhythm.
The next week I had a collapsed lung, and spent 4 days in the hospital with a tube in my side.
3 months post-op, returned to work, feeling pretty darn good. I had a physical job at a manufacturing plant, running around, carrying, lifting, pushing. Worked about 3 months, only got winded occasionally, and a little tight in the chest. From the time I got home from hospital until I returned to work, I was walking distances, lifting , increasing right up to return to work.
Then symptoms started slowly returning - more fatigue,short of breath, muscle weakness. Getting back up from bending or squatting became more difficult (never had been before), and was accompanied by moderate dizziness,weakness, SOB.
Presently, I've had to take a less physical job. I walk around a store all day, doing light lifting (10-20 pounds), some bending, still quite busy but less strenuous.
I get winded quite easily, taking frequent mini-breaks when my legs get shaky and weak. If I lift the above weight more than three times repeatedly, I have to sit down and breathe. I can do stairs once,then need rest.
My cardiologist is being very thorough, I've done a treadmill test (I lasted all of 6 minutes), and we've scheduled a pulmonary function test, and another echo. Plus about 8 vials and two bottles of bloodwork. I don't get to see him for these results, however, until May 2nd.
I've been reading and hearing all the wonderful success stories, and I was expecting mine to be the same. And for the first 6 months or so, it was. I had energy at work I hadn't had for a long time. I really would like to know what changed. I'm not the youngest to have a BAV replaced, but I am only 44.
So has anyone else had anything like this? Anyone else been feeling great for awhile post-op, then had it seemingly reversed? Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.
Loving this forum, lots of wonderful information here. I'm looking for some answers.
March 21st, 2013. OHS to repair ascending aortic aneurysm at 52mm, and replace bicuspid aortic valve with mechanical. Had been having symptoms for about 6 months previously, including frequent shortness of breath, fatigue, muscle weakness, some dizziness/lightheadedness, chest pains that radiated across shoulders, down left arm.
About a week post-op, I had a bout of a-fib that wouldn't stop, lasted close to 3 hours. They finally put me out and shocked me, returning me to sinus rhythm.
The next week I had a collapsed lung, and spent 4 days in the hospital with a tube in my side.
3 months post-op, returned to work, feeling pretty darn good. I had a physical job at a manufacturing plant, running around, carrying, lifting, pushing. Worked about 3 months, only got winded occasionally, and a little tight in the chest. From the time I got home from hospital until I returned to work, I was walking distances, lifting , increasing right up to return to work.
Then symptoms started slowly returning - more fatigue,short of breath, muscle weakness. Getting back up from bending or squatting became more difficult (never had been before), and was accompanied by moderate dizziness,weakness, SOB.
Presently, I've had to take a less physical job. I walk around a store all day, doing light lifting (10-20 pounds), some bending, still quite busy but less strenuous.
I get winded quite easily, taking frequent mini-breaks when my legs get shaky and weak. If I lift the above weight more than three times repeatedly, I have to sit down and breathe. I can do stairs once,then need rest.
My cardiologist is being very thorough, I've done a treadmill test (I lasted all of 6 minutes), and we've scheduled a pulmonary function test, and another echo. Plus about 8 vials and two bottles of bloodwork. I don't get to see him for these results, however, until May 2nd.
I've been reading and hearing all the wonderful success stories, and I was expecting mine to be the same. And for the first 6 months or so, it was. I had energy at work I hadn't had for a long time. I really would like to know what changed. I'm not the youngest to have a BAV replaced, but I am only 44.
So has anyone else had anything like this? Anyone else been feeling great for awhile post-op, then had it seemingly reversed? Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated.