Hi and welcome to the forum.
is it better to do the extractions now or do it after the surgery?
It sounds like you are getting your dental procedure today and have already decided to get the dental work done before surgery. In my view, you are making the correct decision, as it is better to get the dental work done prior and give time for things to heal up before getting valve surgery. The period following surgery is probably the time when you are at greatest risk, given the nice home for bacteria created as the sutures heal. I was told that I should wait at least 3 months after valve surgery before getting any dental work or cleaning, and best to get both work and cleaning done prior to surgery, which I did.
Also, does Bicuspid valve expose you to higher risk for Endocarditis after invasive dental work even with antibiotics cover?
It appears that you are pre-medicating with 2,000mg of amoxicillin. This is exactly what I would do, and this is exactly what I did, in fact, do. You and your dentist have already made the decision to pre-medicate, but I'll add some comments here for the benefit of others who might stumble upon this thread in the future.
Before 2007, it was standard procedure to pre-medicate with 2,000mg of amoxicillin about 1 hour prior to any dental work or cleaning for both 1)patients with valve disease who had not yet had surgery and 2) patients who had already had their valve surgery and now have a prosthetic heart valve. This was in the ADA guidelines. But, guidelines often change and in the new 2007/2008 guidelines this was modified. The new 2007/2008 guidelines recommended that pre surgery patients with valve disease no longer take amoxicillin prior to dental work/cleanings, but they continued to recommend that patients premedicate with 2,000mg of amoxicillin if they were post surgery and had a prosthetic valve prior to dental work/cleanings. An important nuance: their reasoning was not because it was believed that there was no benefit to pre-medicating for these pre-surgery patients, but that there was not sufficient evidence that the benefit outweighed the negative to society of over prescribing anti-biotics, which many believed, perhaps with good reason, was a growing problem. But, that does not mean it was settled and it is not- there are two camps currently regarding the premedication of pre-surgery valve disease patients.
Although the risk of endocarditis is higher for post surgery patients with prosthetic valves compared to pre-surgery patients with valve disease, those who are pre-surgery are still at significantly greater risk for endocarditis than the general public when undergoing dental work. So, many dentists and cardiologists still recommend anti-biotics prior to dental work, even if the valve disease patient is pre-surgery. My dentist is in this camp. Once I was diagnosed with aortic stenosis, he had me pre-medicate with amoxicillin prior to each cleaning or other dental procedure, although we did have a discussion about the guidelines and he indicated that if I preferred to follow the guidelines and not pre-medicate that it would be my choice. As far as how much the antibiotics did to lower my risk of contracting endo at that time, we just don't have the data to say with any precision. However, the very minimal downside risk of taking one dose of amoxicillin would almost certainly be worth the potential of preventing endocarditis in the mind of my dentist and, from what I understand, many cardiologists. I share this view, and thus would fully endorse the decision of you and your dentist to pre-medicate with antibiotics prior to this procedure.
With that, wishing you the very best of luck with today's dental extractions and with your upcoming valve surgery in April.