ajc1991
Well-known member
Hi all, I am a 23 year old male and I had my surgery on January 15th of this year to have my severely regurgitating bicuspid aortic valve replaced with a St. Jude mechanical valve. I had my first post surgery followup with my surgeon and it went very well!
The nurse practitioner of course had a look at my incision and there is no sign of infection. She also removed the sutures from the chest tube sites.
They are starting to wean me off of the beta blocker Metoprolol to two times a day instead of three. I was taking 100 mg Metoprolol three times a day, now it's just two and she's going to start weaning me slowly off of those. She also had me stop taking the low dose aspirin daily since my INR is up to 3.4 from the Coumadin. She says I can start building up my walking and still suggests that I don't run for at least 2 more months so the sternum can heal.
I also had a followup with my cardiologist and primary physician and both of those visits went very good as well.
All in all I feel great. I'm really surprised I feel this good this early. Everyone's experiance with this surgery is different and people will face different struggles. With this in mind, I wasn't sure how I would feel at this point in time. I'm glad to say I don't feel like I had the surgery. I just have a slight soreness from the sternum when I get in and out of bed.
I know not to overdue it with the sternum, even if I feel this good. I'm still taking GREAT care.
The nurse practitioner of course had a look at my incision and there is no sign of infection. She also removed the sutures from the chest tube sites.
They are starting to wean me off of the beta blocker Metoprolol to two times a day instead of three. I was taking 100 mg Metoprolol three times a day, now it's just two and she's going to start weaning me slowly off of those. She also had me stop taking the low dose aspirin daily since my INR is up to 3.4 from the Coumadin. She says I can start building up my walking and still suggests that I don't run for at least 2 more months so the sternum can heal.
I also had a followup with my cardiologist and primary physician and both of those visits went very good as well.
All in all I feel great. I'm really surprised I feel this good this early. Everyone's experiance with this surgery is different and people will face different struggles. With this in mind, I wasn't sure how I would feel at this point in time. I'm glad to say I don't feel like I had the surgery. I just have a slight soreness from the sternum when I get in and out of bed.
I know not to overdue it with the sternum, even if I feel this good. I'm still taking GREAT care.