Good morning
I'm 48, had OHS AVR and aneurysm repair in 2013. 11 years later and my Edwards Bovine is severely regurgitating. Time for surgery.
I see you haven't made many posts since then so I suspect that you may not have kept up but instead gone blue pill an doubled down on your good choice in your 30's to have had a bovine ... I'm sorry about that.
As you will know if you read any of my replies I'm a strong advocate of a mechanical valve choice.
So let me address your questions in a different order
C) TAVR with a tissue valve, which he said would only last 3-4 years for me, and he was against for my case.
This was told to be an impossibility for me until I met the surgeon yesterday.
its up to you, but
- there are reasons why its designated for high risk patients (note, high risk means high risk of death due to surgery)
- the surgeon you spoke with was either brain washed, dishonest or you pushed that line (I can't know which)
So please, do take the time to read this:
Almost 50% of Patients Under 60 Years Choose TAVR Over SAVR with Worse Outcomes
https://www.sts.org/press-releases/...60-years-choose-tavr-over-savr-worse-outcomes
From a pool of 37,011 patients, the study identified 2,360 patients under the age of 60 years who underwent these procedures with 22% receiving TAVR and 78% SAVR. By 2021 almost half of patients younger than 60 years were receiving TAVR rather than SAVR. The research team followed these patients for a median time of 2.4 years after TAVR and 4.9 years after SAVR to assess their outcomes.
The primary focus was on 5-year survival rates. Secondary outcomes included rates of reoperation, infective endocarditis, stroke, and hospital admissions for heart failure. Propensity score matching ensured a fair comparison of 358 pairs of patients, balancing factors such as age, major health conditions, hospital volume, and urgency.
While the 30-day mortality rates were similar (0.2% for SAVR vs. 0.4% for TAVR), the 5-year survival rate was significantly better after surgery compared to TAVR (98% vs. 86%, p < 0.001). For secondary outcomes, there was no significant difference between the two groups.
“While we expected that the volume of transcatheter therapy would increase over the study period in this young patient cohort, we were surprised there appears to be near equipoise in terms of procedure selection, with patients and clinicians opting for procedures against the 2020 guidelines,” said study coauthor Jad Malas, MD, a cardiothoracic surgery resident at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
sounds
real appealing to me ...
not
B) On-X mechanical valve, which he said he also uses often, but patients complain of loud ticking.
I would never recommend an On-X but would not go as far as to disparage it.
- its a copy of the St Jude (as are many) but offers nothing more than marketing promises and failure to live up to any measurable expectation of its promises. Please read this post.
- Its rather larger and I don't see why nor is there anything it states to excuse it except possibly it has something to do with the Pannus Guard feature. However IMO that's like marketing everyone to wear a full face motorcycle helment while driving a car because its safer. It is, but with motor vehicle accident rate is down to the lowest per 100,000 its been since the 60's
- everyone complains about the ticking ... (*everyone means the vocal minority, like everyone in the USA thinks "insert here")
A) St Jude mechanical valve, which he uses most and pitched the hardest.
I have an ATS, but that would be my pick right now.
Dr also stated the risk of stroke only goes up .33% each year with mechanical St Jude, on a big study that he uses as a standard.
people plain and simple in the main just don't get statistics. I apologise if you are a Statistical Maths Major (in your Maths Degree) but plain and simple its like this:
- it depends entirely on maintaining your INR in the range
- just like a coin flip the results are not cumulative (unless you do not maintain your INR range even half heartedly), even though its 50:50 you won't get a head because you flipped a tail. .
learn how to maintain your INR and you'll be in the green group:
I am going to do my own research and own searching around on this forum for information.
Please do make sure its actual research (involving critical thinking) and not the usual "support my pre-established bias guided readings"
https://cjeastwd.blogspot.com/2021/07/done-my-research.html
I'd start here:
as previously suggested by Dr Schaff of the Mayo
more current video
and perhaps this
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/838221
I would recommend you stop reading right now, get cup of coffee, a pen and paper, make notes while watching and listening
Best Wishes