ncw3642
Well-known member
Hi all,
I am a 26-year old male who had a known history of BAV (known since 2020). Currently asymptomatic with mild to moderate regurgitation. New cardiologist did a Chest CTA and found my aortic root is dilated ‘up to 5cm’ and referred me to CT surgery.
After meeting with my cardiothoracic surgeon, we have decided to perform a valve sparing root replacement (David Procedure). I have the least common Type 0 valve morphology and according to my surgeon these are the easiest to ‘repair’ with good long lasting results. Given my age and otherwise healthy valves/heart, he believes I do not need to have the valve replaced yet and might not for 10-30 years.
My scheduled surgery date is July 10th- so now begins the journey of ‘waiting’ and ‘anticipating’ which is harder than just having it done in my mind.
I am very lucky I had a routine echo and CTA that showed the aneurysm- as I am otherwise asymptomatic and at its size (5.1cm) I would have had no predictors before it potentially ruptures. I am looking at this as a gift, given my type 0 bicuspid valve and hoping the repair and root replacement lasts me a lifetime.
Does anyone know the benefits to doing a repair first for a bicuspid (type 0) valve with mild to moderate regurgitation vs just a mechanical valve? I think I could manage my INR with a mechanical valve. I am very active lifting 5x a week and otherwise healthy but my surgeon also said the mechanical valve isn’t guaranteed to last forever and with the type of bicuspid valve I have, the repair results are great.
Thank you all so much.
I am a 26-year old male who had a known history of BAV (known since 2020). Currently asymptomatic with mild to moderate regurgitation. New cardiologist did a Chest CTA and found my aortic root is dilated ‘up to 5cm’ and referred me to CT surgery.
After meeting with my cardiothoracic surgeon, we have decided to perform a valve sparing root replacement (David Procedure). I have the least common Type 0 valve morphology and according to my surgeon these are the easiest to ‘repair’ with good long lasting results. Given my age and otherwise healthy valves/heart, he believes I do not need to have the valve replaced yet and might not for 10-30 years.
My scheduled surgery date is July 10th- so now begins the journey of ‘waiting’ and ‘anticipating’ which is harder than just having it done in my mind.
I am very lucky I had a routine echo and CTA that showed the aneurysm- as I am otherwise asymptomatic and at its size (5.1cm) I would have had no predictors before it potentially ruptures. I am looking at this as a gift, given my type 0 bicuspid valve and hoping the repair and root replacement lasts me a lifetime.
Does anyone know the benefits to doing a repair first for a bicuspid (type 0) valve with mild to moderate regurgitation vs just a mechanical valve? I think I could manage my INR with a mechanical valve. I am very active lifting 5x a week and otherwise healthy but my surgeon also said the mechanical valve isn’t guaranteed to last forever and with the type of bicuspid valve I have, the repair results are great.
Thank you all so much.