I'm probably one of those who over-did things before surgery. I felt that as long as my cardio was watching the dimensions of my heart on periodic echo's, they would warn me if my heart began to get too enlarged. They did just that -- as I was deciding that it was time for surgery, the last echo before surgery showed my left ventricle to be at the top of the acceptable size range. If I hadn't decided to go for surgery, the docs would have pressed the issue.
As for what will be after surgery - most of us find that we are better after recovery than before surgery. For some of us, this takes longer, though. In my case, with all of my complications, it was at about 18 months post op that I realized how good I felt.
My first cardio diagnosed my aortic stenosis at age 52. He wanted to treat me as if I was 82. No athletic activities, just stay quiet and it will last longer. Not so - it would just be longer before I would notice symptoms, but in the meantime my life would be terrible. I fired that cardio and found one who had a specialty in valve disease among young to middle-aged patients. This made all the difference in the world. Do you get to choose your own cardio? If so, I would choose another.
As for what will be after surgery - most of us find that we are better after recovery than before surgery. For some of us, this takes longer, though. In my case, with all of my complications, it was at about 18 months post op that I realized how good I felt.
My first cardio diagnosed my aortic stenosis at age 52. He wanted to treat me as if I was 82. No athletic activities, just stay quiet and it will last longer. Not so - it would just be longer before I would notice symptoms, but in the meantime my life would be terrible. I fired that cardio and found one who had a specialty in valve disease among young to middle-aged patients. This made all the difference in the world. Do you get to choose your own cardio? If so, I would choose another.