Nocturne
Well-known member
I've seen many studies now that show long term outcomes of mechanical and bioprosthetic valves to be pretty similar. We all know that some individuals are clearly (or not as clearly) better suited to one type over another, etc. so I'm not challenging that. If either sort of valve were unilaterally better than the other, then it would have become the gold standard and the other would have gone the way of the rotary phone by now.
But here's a thought, and it builds on a study someone posted earlier comparing Ross procedure outcomes to outcomes of mechanical valves where the patient's INR was WELL MANAGED, as well as expressed opinions of some posters about how some people don't do a good job of managing their INR (which stands to reason).
If outcomes of bioprosthetic and mechanical valves are similar, and mechanical valve outcomes include people who do a horrid job of managing INR as well as those who do superlative jobs of managing INR, you'd expect that the ones managing their INR very well would have better outcomes than average for their group. Meanwhile, people with bioprosthetic valves don't generally have to do anything to manage them, and their conscientiousness in management should have no impact on outcomes (because they have nothing to manage).
So it would stand to reason that people with mechanical valves who manage their INR very well have overall BETTER outcomes, on average, than tissue valvers.
Does this make any sense?
But here's a thought, and it builds on a study someone posted earlier comparing Ross procedure outcomes to outcomes of mechanical valves where the patient's INR was WELL MANAGED, as well as expressed opinions of some posters about how some people don't do a good job of managing their INR (which stands to reason).
If outcomes of bioprosthetic and mechanical valves are similar, and mechanical valve outcomes include people who do a horrid job of managing INR as well as those who do superlative jobs of managing INR, you'd expect that the ones managing their INR very well would have better outcomes than average for their group. Meanwhile, people with bioprosthetic valves don't generally have to do anything to manage them, and their conscientiousness in management should have no impact on outcomes (because they have nothing to manage).
So it would stand to reason that people with mechanical valves who manage their INR very well have overall BETTER outcomes, on average, than tissue valvers.
Does this make any sense?