RonP
Member
Hello Everyone
I’ve been lurking and reading this forum since August when I was told that I finally needed to have my mitral valve repaired. It’s been a fantastic source of information and support! Many thanks to everyone who contributes!
I had my surgery (extensive mitral valve repair, maze procedure, and left atrial appendage closure) done robotically on September 30th and I’m coming up on my 5th week anniversary on Wednesday. The surgery was long (4 hours on by-pass and 6.5 hours total) but I was out of the hospital on day #3 and was walking for 60 minutes on day #7. My incisions have healed nicely and, though I don’t think I could break into a sprint, I feel and am acting pretty normal.
However…my cardiologist had me do an echo at week #3. When I went to talk to him to hear the results he said “I have good news and bad news. The good news is that your valve is fixed and your heart has already greatly reduced in size. The bad news is that your heart is not pumping like it should. Your ejection fraction is only 25%.” Needless to say, I was shocked because I felt fine. I had no clue that anything was wrong. The next day (last Thursday) I was in for another angiogram to rule out artery damage from the surgery and get a more accurate EF measurement. There was no damage but my EF was still just at 28%. The only theory offered by my cardiologist is that being on bypass for 4 hours (actually I was on, off, on, then off again because of the complexity of the surgery) possibly damaged my heart. I’m to schedule another echo in December, 8-10 weeks post op.
My EF presurgery was in the mid 50% range.
I’m on carvedilol (6.25mg 2x) and lisinopril (2.5mg 1x).
My blood pressure is 120s/70s. My pulse is high 80’s/low 90’s (higher than presurgery).
The questions I have are:
1. Is it too soon to be concerned over the results of an echo at 3 weeks and an angiogram at 4 weeks? Would 3-6 months out be a better indicator?
2. Is it normal for the EF to be low postop? Can/does it then increase over time as the heart remodels?
3. Should I be worried about having such a low EF? Short term? Long term?
4. My doctor has not asked me to start increasing my carvedilol but everything I’ve read says that I should be stepping it up towards 25mg 2x to help my heart remodel properly. True?
Thanks!
Ron
I’ve been lurking and reading this forum since August when I was told that I finally needed to have my mitral valve repaired. It’s been a fantastic source of information and support! Many thanks to everyone who contributes!
I had my surgery (extensive mitral valve repair, maze procedure, and left atrial appendage closure) done robotically on September 30th and I’m coming up on my 5th week anniversary on Wednesday. The surgery was long (4 hours on by-pass and 6.5 hours total) but I was out of the hospital on day #3 and was walking for 60 minutes on day #7. My incisions have healed nicely and, though I don’t think I could break into a sprint, I feel and am acting pretty normal.
However…my cardiologist had me do an echo at week #3. When I went to talk to him to hear the results he said “I have good news and bad news. The good news is that your valve is fixed and your heart has already greatly reduced in size. The bad news is that your heart is not pumping like it should. Your ejection fraction is only 25%.” Needless to say, I was shocked because I felt fine. I had no clue that anything was wrong. The next day (last Thursday) I was in for another angiogram to rule out artery damage from the surgery and get a more accurate EF measurement. There was no damage but my EF was still just at 28%. The only theory offered by my cardiologist is that being on bypass for 4 hours (actually I was on, off, on, then off again because of the complexity of the surgery) possibly damaged my heart. I’m to schedule another echo in December, 8-10 weeks post op.
My EF presurgery was in the mid 50% range.
I’m on carvedilol (6.25mg 2x) and lisinopril (2.5mg 1x).
My blood pressure is 120s/70s. My pulse is high 80’s/low 90’s (higher than presurgery).
The questions I have are:
1. Is it too soon to be concerned over the results of an echo at 3 weeks and an angiogram at 4 weeks? Would 3-6 months out be a better indicator?
2. Is it normal for the EF to be low postop? Can/does it then increase over time as the heart remodels?
3. Should I be worried about having such a low EF? Short term? Long term?
4. My doctor has not asked me to start increasing my carvedilol but everything I’ve read says that I should be stepping it up towards 25mg 2x to help my heart remodel properly. True?
Thanks!
Ron