Heather Anne
Well-known member
Hi, all -- I'm new to posting, but I've been "lurking" for about a year. I've seen my question addressed a little bit in other threads, but I thought I'd just throw it out there more directly.
I was diagnosed with BAV at the age of 5. The stenosis has progressed over the years until now, at age 46, it is severe (.79 cm, with a gradient of 45). However, I have no symptoms. I exercise frequently -- swimming over a mile three times a week, and lifting weights 2-3 times a week -- with no shortness of breath, chest pain, etc.
My doctor has me in "watch and wait" mode, coming in every six months for an echo, and every time the stenosis is a teeny tiny bit worse, but no dramatic change. There is no sign of an aortic aneurysm, and no evidence of heart damage. He says he'll send me off to the surgeon as soon as I develop symptoms. But he doesn't want to operate before I have symptoms because (1) the risk of surgery outweighs the risk of sudden death in an asymptomatic person and (2) because of my relative youth, every year I can wait means one less year on coumadin or, if I went with tissue, a longer-lived valve. I've done some research, and it appears to be a tough call whether to do an AVR on an asymptomatic person with severe AS and no other heart issues unless the valve area is .6 or less.
I don't want to have surgery before I need it, but Sudden Death sounds like no fun either, and my heart is pretty darned stenotic. So I thought I'd ask this group of experts for some anecdotal evidence. Were any of you confronted with this dilemma (severe AS but no symptoms)? Did you wait for symptoms to develop, or have the surgery done before symptoms manifested? On what factors did you rely?
I know that's a lot of info, and I thank you for even taking the time to read all the way through this! And thank you all for the support you provide. This is a great community!
I was diagnosed with BAV at the age of 5. The stenosis has progressed over the years until now, at age 46, it is severe (.79 cm, with a gradient of 45). However, I have no symptoms. I exercise frequently -- swimming over a mile three times a week, and lifting weights 2-3 times a week -- with no shortness of breath, chest pain, etc.
My doctor has me in "watch and wait" mode, coming in every six months for an echo, and every time the stenosis is a teeny tiny bit worse, but no dramatic change. There is no sign of an aortic aneurysm, and no evidence of heart damage. He says he'll send me off to the surgeon as soon as I develop symptoms. But he doesn't want to operate before I have symptoms because (1) the risk of surgery outweighs the risk of sudden death in an asymptomatic person and (2) because of my relative youth, every year I can wait means one less year on coumadin or, if I went with tissue, a longer-lived valve. I've done some research, and it appears to be a tough call whether to do an AVR on an asymptomatic person with severe AS and no other heart issues unless the valve area is .6 or less.
I don't want to have surgery before I need it, but Sudden Death sounds like no fun either, and my heart is pretty darned stenotic. So I thought I'd ask this group of experts for some anecdotal evidence. Were any of you confronted with this dilemma (severe AS but no symptoms)? Did you wait for symptoms to develop, or have the surgery done before symptoms manifested? On what factors did you rely?
I know that's a lot of info, and I thank you for even taking the time to read all the way through this! And thank you all for the support you provide. This is a great community!