natedrums
New member
Very thankful again for this community. Can't find much info posted from many people having surgery while still relatively young (I'm 26). I know I'm in the very-young category for needing to get AVR done, and I'm sure I should count myself fortunate for being in excellent health otherwise--in fact just in the last several months I got back into biking/not eating terribly and lost about 40 pounds.
Went in for pre-admission today, and for the first time I'm pretty scared. Before today, I was more anxious about the long recovery, not being able to play (I'm a freelance musician, and I'm keeping a tally of the substantial money I'm losing out on during recovery, as if it were more important than my health!), being unable to prepare for auditions and the performances I do have scheduled starting around March (rehearsals Feb.). Now I'm vividly remembering how terrified I was before my valvuloplasty this year, getting anesthetized and painfully poked for IVs, and that's a much less-big deal than full on OHS. I'm happy to see so many people just don't remember anything past the holding room, but it's not helping so much with my anxiety. Speaking of which, I'm getting back on my anti-anxiety meds today. Don't know why in the hell I ever got off them--I couldn't have picked a worse time.
Less than 2 weeks away and I'm still not sure of what kind of valve to get. Leaning towards tissue (homograft)--with the recent approval of percutaneous valves (albeit not for all of us yet), it does seem like a second OHS is much less likely...Also less risk of bleeding if I break something...I'm not and never have been into extreme sports, but there's so much that I want to try now since I never have had the chance. At 26 I don't want to have to put a cap on what I can and can't do by myself for the rest of my life. I would like to skydive, learn to ski, all stuff I imagine I'd be at risk for with coumadin...Not to mention, if anyone read my only other post, tissue is likely the only way I'd ever be able to do basic training (for a position in a high-level military band, one of which I already won an audition for last summer, only to find out I was medically disqualified), if I could ever be approved for it. A resident working with my soon-to-be-surgeon used to work in MEPS (military medicine) and seems to think I'd never be approved, even though I'm going to be so much healthier after the surgery than I am now. I can't overstate how crushed I would be if that were the case, but that's for a different forum.
Anyway, if you skip just this last paragraph, the gist: Yesterday I wasn't scared, now I am. If anyone could reassure me a nurse is not going to give me the wrong medication and kill me (this happened to the father of a friend), or has any other encouraging words, it would be much appreciated!
Best-
Nate
Went in for pre-admission today, and for the first time I'm pretty scared. Before today, I was more anxious about the long recovery, not being able to play (I'm a freelance musician, and I'm keeping a tally of the substantial money I'm losing out on during recovery, as if it were more important than my health!), being unable to prepare for auditions and the performances I do have scheduled starting around March (rehearsals Feb.). Now I'm vividly remembering how terrified I was before my valvuloplasty this year, getting anesthetized and painfully poked for IVs, and that's a much less-big deal than full on OHS. I'm happy to see so many people just don't remember anything past the holding room, but it's not helping so much with my anxiety. Speaking of which, I'm getting back on my anti-anxiety meds today. Don't know why in the hell I ever got off them--I couldn't have picked a worse time.
Less than 2 weeks away and I'm still not sure of what kind of valve to get. Leaning towards tissue (homograft)--with the recent approval of percutaneous valves (albeit not for all of us yet), it does seem like a second OHS is much less likely...Also less risk of bleeding if I break something...I'm not and never have been into extreme sports, but there's so much that I want to try now since I never have had the chance. At 26 I don't want to have to put a cap on what I can and can't do by myself for the rest of my life. I would like to skydive, learn to ski, all stuff I imagine I'd be at risk for with coumadin...Not to mention, if anyone read my only other post, tissue is likely the only way I'd ever be able to do basic training (for a position in a high-level military band, one of which I already won an audition for last summer, only to find out I was medically disqualified), if I could ever be approved for it. A resident working with my soon-to-be-surgeon used to work in MEPS (military medicine) and seems to think I'd never be approved, even though I'm going to be so much healthier after the surgery than I am now. I can't overstate how crushed I would be if that were the case, but that's for a different forum.
Anyway, if you skip just this last paragraph, the gist: Yesterday I wasn't scared, now I am. If anyone could reassure me a nurse is not going to give me the wrong medication and kill me (this happened to the father of a friend), or has any other encouraging words, it would be much appreciated!
Best-
Nate