pellicle
Professional Dingbat, Guru and Merkintologist
Hi
Interesting, so, what year was her graft put in?
did it "dissect" or did it separate from the place it was stiched to?
was it a graft which was produced as a component with the valve?
was a valve replaced at the same time?
where did it rupture (and was it near the arch)?
I'm pretty sure that's going to be difficult to find, I'd contact manuracturers directly (and in my view its like asking "did car tyres change in the last 40 years).
Also, as I understood it, you have one doctor (was he a surgeon?) saying they last for 30 years and a number who say "its good for life" ... why do you place so much more stock in the opinion of that one? Greater experience?
Ultimately you'll be much better off with any graft than keeping the original ... that's almost a 100% certainty to not last 30 more years.
Maybe I'm some sort of fool, but in all my surgeries I never once asked how long I'd live for ... I never put my foot down and required anything to do more than move me along.
Probably I'd had enough friends die in car accidents, cancer, and other issues to even think of such things as requiring a certainty of the future.
I still return to quoting Seneca:
"They lose the day in expectation of the night, and the night in fear of the dawn."
dixitworld;n885097 said:No Tom I didn’t misunderstood , he was firm in what he said.
today also I heard from one lady that her aorta graft dissected after 20 plus years.
Interesting, so, what year was her graft put in?
did it "dissect" or did it separate from the place it was stiched to?
was it a graft which was produced as a component with the valve?
was a valve replaced at the same time?
where did it rupture (and was it near the arch)?
I am trying to find if the Dacron graft used now is different than earlier age grafts or they are same.
I'm pretty sure that's going to be difficult to find, I'd contact manuracturers directly (and in my view its like asking "did car tyres change in the last 40 years).
Also, as I understood it, you have one doctor (was he a surgeon?) saying they last for 30 years and a number who say "its good for life" ... why do you place so much more stock in the opinion of that one? Greater experience?
Ultimately you'll be much better off with any graft than keeping the original ... that's almost a 100% certainty to not last 30 more years.
Maybe I'm some sort of fool, but in all my surgeries I never once asked how long I'd live for ... I never put my foot down and required anything to do more than move me along.
Probably I'd had enough friends die in car accidents, cancer, and other issues to even think of such things as requiring a certainty of the future.
I still return to quoting Seneca:
"They lose the day in expectation of the night, and the night in fear of the dawn."
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