Ok, looking for a little encouraging news from those of you who touched all the bases and lived to talk about it.
GPR, welcome to the club. Your membership card is in the mail! Pellicle is president.
I had the full shebang at the CC. Aortic valve, root and ascending aorta with a CABGx1 thrown in as a bonus. Full sternotomy.
Here we are, one year and two days out, now 68, and if it wasn't for the scar, which is fading, I would never know anything was done.
You are in great hands and if you are in halfway decent shape you should come through with flying colors. Your positive attitude and especially your sense of humor will be your best friends. There are no straight lines. I had a complication from an incidental finding but it was more of an annoyance than anything.
So here's the deal: I didn't know I would need a CABG until my surgeon told me the day before surgery. It was the first time I became somewhat concerned, because my goal was to be on the HL machine as little as possible. So I asked him, "How much time will that add?" He replied, "Seven minutes." And so it was. I went back to being happy and upbeat and, in all, while I was lights-out for five hours, I was on the HL machine for about 70 minutes. (Otherwise it would have been about an hour.)
I was home on Day 11 and sitting at my desk, kind of working, Day 12. Importantly, however you visualize this, you will NOT be a vegetable or incapacitated or anything like that. There will be restrictions for up to eight weeks on lifting things, but by eight weeks I was walking 3+ miles. I didn't need a recliner or anything like that. If you follow the protocol, especially with the spirometer they give you to blow into and the walking, you will probably be amazed at the speed of the recovery and how you get over certain hurdles to new levels of your old self. We're talking only a few weeks for that to happen - again, assuming you are in decent shape. Longer, I am told, if you are not. But even then....recover you will.
Your surgeon: People love Roselli. In fact, it's hard to find any surgeon there that people talk poorly about. Mine was fantastic. It's the system - the way they do things. As one guy told me, CC is a machine, but in a good way. I found most of the medical staff to be highly personable and caring. Things ran like clockwork. I didn't like my first step-down nurse and mentioned it to my surgeon's nurse practitioner and - presto! - I had a new utterly amazing nurse.
I echo what George said about the CC videos. He seems as obsessed as I was. They are without question the best out there and I have scoured the world for videos like these. Johnson has a series on what to expect before and after surgery. They're very good and comforting.
Symptomatic: I thought I was asymptomatic but, in retrospect, had been noticing some tightness in my chest when I walked up super-steep hills. (Otherwise I walked quickly and didn't have the fatigue so many have.) My doctors seem to think the tightness was likely my valve rather than the 80% blocked marginal obtuse artery, but nobody knows for sure. I will say, since you need a CABGx? - be glad you found it before it found you. I had passed the pre-surgical stress test with flying colors, but they advised me that the results are only about 70% accurate. The angiogram said, "Not so fast!" They say had I not known I had the blockage I would have likely started to suffer angina or had a heart-damaging heart attack. For me, that angiogram the silver lining of having to have heart valve surgery. Oh, and when I exercise I am faster than ever, with reserve power I never knew I had. In other words, I probably had "symptoms" that I didn't realize were symptoms. A lot of folks seem to say that.
Feel free to reach out with any questions.
Cheers.