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Hi just wondering if anyone has had dental surgery while on warfarin and has a mechanical valve. Any help would be appreciated.
tom in MO;n886291 said:,,,This was per recommendation of Surfergirl's infection disease doctor.
ski girl;n40451 said:A few of you may remember me from 2010 when I got an AVR with tissue valve. Well, here's an update!
In August, I ran our local 12km race with over 30,000 of my closest friends. I felt awful, I could NOT believe how hard it was. After I got home I took a nap, and woke up with what I assumed was the flu - all shivery and temp 40C (should be 37C). This was Sunday. Then it got worse, and by Tuesday night I was having mad shaking episodes known as rigors, so I stumbled down to my local GP for whatever the cure is for the flu.
However, she didn't think it was the flu, so she rang my cardiologist (who is the most thorough person on the planet) and he told me to come in to the hospital so we could find out where the infection was.
That was Wednesday. I went downhill. By that evening I had massive pain around the area of my gallbladder and not even morphine could fix it - I was truly miserable. The search for the source of the infection was ON!
By the Friday I was having a transesophageal echo, and that showed a massive buildup of bacteria around my valve with an abscess to boot, and the bacteria were blocking my coronary artery by 60%. I was damn lucky to have lived through the race.
So on the Sunday (one week after my 12km race!) I was having my AVR redone, after being told I might not even live to the surgery, then might not make it through - needless to say this was hugely stressful and I was very grateful to open my eyes after the surgery and realise I was alive!
I've quizzed my cardiologist, my surgeon, and my infectious diseases specialist about how in the heck this happened - I grew Strep sanguinus, which is a common mouth bacteria. Most likely I was just brushing or flossing and poked some bacteria through my gums. We can all do this, but getting as far as I got is extremely rare, even in people with artificial valves.
So how to prevent it? The key seems to be mouthwash before brushing or flossing, then wait five minutes before you brush/floss. I really wish I'd been told this little nugget of advice after the first operation, but maybe some of you can benefit from it now!!!
Paleowoman;n886292 said:I had a wisdom tooth extracted a year after AVR. I had antibiotic prophylaxsis. As I was having the tooth extracted in a hospital I asked, when I was in the operating theatre, why wasn't I given some sort of antibiotic rinse or spray in my mouth. The answer was that there are so many different types of bacteria in the mouth that it would be impossible to kill them all, hence the antibiotic prophylaxisis in case any of them make it into the bloodstream.
tom in MO;n886295 said:That doesn't make sense, if they make you take a broad spectrum antibiotic, the same logic would apply to a broad spectrum antisceptic before it gets in your bloodstream.
I was surprised too, but it kind of makes sense because if these antiseptic mouthwashes really killed all the bacteria they would eliminate dental decay which they don't appear to entirely do. Our mouth contains the most amazing number of bacteria, a google or yahoo search brings loads of hits about it, I like this one which begins "The oral cavity contains some of the most varied and vast flora in the entire human body" : https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1081424-overviewtom in MO;n886295 said:That doesn't make sense, if they make you take a broad spectrum antibiotic, the same logic would apply to a broad spectrum antisceptic before it gets in your bloodstream. Surfergirl got her advice from an infectous disease doctor. My dentist said it's not in the "protocol" but makes sense. When I had gum surgery, pre-VR, they gave me a prescription mouth wash, so their are products that kill mouth flora.
MrsBray;n886309 said:So far, I'll be able to be buried with everything I came into this world with, except my BAV.)
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