CelticSicilian
New member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2021
- Messages
- 1
Hey all.
Just putting my story out there for others like me. I was super nervous about this surgery before it and stressing the bio vs mechanical valve choice. This forum helped me immensely since it let me see that I wasn’t the only one going through this at my age. I’m 26 and have known I’ve had a bicuspid aortic valve for a while but was very surprised when I learned I needed surgery. I thought I wouldn’t needed it until my 40s. But anyway I got the on-x mechanical valve and don’t regret it at all. Initially the idea of blood thinners scared me so I was strongly opposed to going mechanical. But after discussing with a few surgeons I decided planning extra heart surgeries is not a good idea. I’m so young that I 100% would need a mechanical valve at some point. With each heart surgery the risk goes up so getting a new bio valve every 5 years would stack very quickly. My fears of blood thinners were largely overblown. 3 months later I feel almost back to normal and forget I even had the surgery most of the time. I was worried about some small things before the surgery so I’ll cover my experiences on those so others have the reference. One was being afraid I wouldn’t be able to drink or smoke weed. I can preface it by saying I didn’t really drink very much before the surgery (4ish drinks at a time about twice a month) and I smoke weed about 3-4 times a month. I haven’t changed my drinking or smoking at all on blood thinners and haven’t seen any adverse effects on my INR. Just wanted to put that experience out there because it was something I worried about pre surgery. I Found a quote on here I really liked “dose the diet, don’t diet the dose” and thankfully it’s true. Coumadin doesn’t really give me any diet “restrictions” just things I have to be aware of. Know what foods have a lot of vitamin k and then if you have those foods note it to your Coumadin clinic and they can help you balance your dose for it. You don’t need to change your lifestyle you just need to increase your awareness. Finally activity wise I haven’t really changed my lifestyle either. I moved to Europe since the surgery and I bike to work everyday with no issues. It’s early on so I still have a lot to learn but again it seems like the surgery demands a change in awareness not a change in lifestyle which was what scared me. If I have a bad fall on my bike know I’ll need to get a scan to check if I have any hemorrhaging but that’s about the only difference.
ok so that’s all I want to say to people before the surgery. Good luck! Take it one day at a time and you can do it!
Now I have some questions for veterans who have gone through this before me. When does your chest feel normal again? My sternum is at the point now that it’s mostly normal, but a few things still feel wierd. Like sleeping on my side still causes a little bit of discomfort. Does this continue forever? How does your chest feel a year or so out?
Thanks all!
Just putting my story out there for others like me. I was super nervous about this surgery before it and stressing the bio vs mechanical valve choice. This forum helped me immensely since it let me see that I wasn’t the only one going through this at my age. I’m 26 and have known I’ve had a bicuspid aortic valve for a while but was very surprised when I learned I needed surgery. I thought I wouldn’t needed it until my 40s. But anyway I got the on-x mechanical valve and don’t regret it at all. Initially the idea of blood thinners scared me so I was strongly opposed to going mechanical. But after discussing with a few surgeons I decided planning extra heart surgeries is not a good idea. I’m so young that I 100% would need a mechanical valve at some point. With each heart surgery the risk goes up so getting a new bio valve every 5 years would stack very quickly. My fears of blood thinners were largely overblown. 3 months later I feel almost back to normal and forget I even had the surgery most of the time. I was worried about some small things before the surgery so I’ll cover my experiences on those so others have the reference. One was being afraid I wouldn’t be able to drink or smoke weed. I can preface it by saying I didn’t really drink very much before the surgery (4ish drinks at a time about twice a month) and I smoke weed about 3-4 times a month. I haven’t changed my drinking or smoking at all on blood thinners and haven’t seen any adverse effects on my INR. Just wanted to put that experience out there because it was something I worried about pre surgery. I Found a quote on here I really liked “dose the diet, don’t diet the dose” and thankfully it’s true. Coumadin doesn’t really give me any diet “restrictions” just things I have to be aware of. Know what foods have a lot of vitamin k and then if you have those foods note it to your Coumadin clinic and they can help you balance your dose for it. You don’t need to change your lifestyle you just need to increase your awareness. Finally activity wise I haven’t really changed my lifestyle either. I moved to Europe since the surgery and I bike to work everyday with no issues. It’s early on so I still have a lot to learn but again it seems like the surgery demands a change in awareness not a change in lifestyle which was what scared me. If I have a bad fall on my bike know I’ll need to get a scan to check if I have any hemorrhaging but that’s about the only difference.
ok so that’s all I want to say to people before the surgery. Good luck! Take it one day at a time and you can do it!
Now I have some questions for veterans who have gone through this before me. When does your chest feel normal again? My sternum is at the point now that it’s mostly normal, but a few things still feel wierd. Like sleeping on my side still causes a little bit of discomfort. Does this continue forever? How does your chest feel a year or so out?
Thanks all!