G
Guest
Hey there... Long time reader just lurking, finally posting... Going to make this brief.
I started reading this forum when I was anxiously awaiting my first AVR/MVR with st Jude valves, due to endocarditis. This was at age 27, in Feb 2014 in Louisiana, where I grew up and my parents still live. I was scared and reading this forum gave me immense peace of mind.
Over the summer of 2014, my new cardio in California drew my attention to my aortic transvalvular gradient, which at 40mercury is apparently very high. When I returned to Louisiana for the 2014 holidays , my cardio there insisted that it was normal and nothing to be concerned about.. I demanded another echo before I returned to California the following spring, early 2015. When I presented the echocardiogram results to my Cali cardio, he broke the news to me that the Louisiana doc had (seemingly intentionally?) failed to include the one measurement in question, the aortic transvalvular gradient. He insisted that I take a referral down to Stanford hospital, where I have been told that the pressure is 36-40mercury and way too high and that the 19mm valve is too small, and that the surgeon here has lots of experience in replacing valves - he said he will do an aortic root to widen it and put in a larger valve. He is the head of the cardio dept here so I am certain he is quite expert at this...
I'm quite terrified because, a re-operative sternotomy is supposed to be even more painful , and I'm .... Yeah. Terrified.
Anyway. Any thoughts or words would be so appreciated... Surgery is tomorrow!!!!
Love and well wishes to all,
Eric
I started reading this forum when I was anxiously awaiting my first AVR/MVR with st Jude valves, due to endocarditis. This was at age 27, in Feb 2014 in Louisiana, where I grew up and my parents still live. I was scared and reading this forum gave me immense peace of mind.
Over the summer of 2014, my new cardio in California drew my attention to my aortic transvalvular gradient, which at 40mercury is apparently very high. When I returned to Louisiana for the 2014 holidays , my cardio there insisted that it was normal and nothing to be concerned about.. I demanded another echo before I returned to California the following spring, early 2015. When I presented the echocardiogram results to my Cali cardio, he broke the news to me that the Louisiana doc had (seemingly intentionally?) failed to include the one measurement in question, the aortic transvalvular gradient. He insisted that I take a referral down to Stanford hospital, where I have been told that the pressure is 36-40mercury and way too high and that the 19mm valve is too small, and that the surgeon here has lots of experience in replacing valves - he said he will do an aortic root to widen it and put in a larger valve. He is the head of the cardio dept here so I am certain he is quite expert at this...
I'm quite terrified because, a re-operative sternotomy is supposed to be even more painful , and I'm .... Yeah. Terrified.
Anyway. Any thoughts or words would be so appreciated... Surgery is tomorrow!!!!
Love and well wishes to all,
Eric