and
aetos
I would like to take these points:
and add that if your brothers need for surgery extends as far as 8 years then the medical landscape could well have changed significantly.
- mechanical valves which may not need AC therapy (ATS ForceField, Tricuspid mechanical)
- improvements in INR management (as we are already in posession of the technology software will develop to support the new systems)
- better tissue prosthetics may emerge (entirely speculative)
so its all looking good for this particular disease in the future
also, being terrified is (to me) an over reaction. I've had 3 surgeries starting at about 10 ... and here I am at 52 after my third at 48 doing well enough thankyou very much. Well enough to be planning a 5 or so day cross country ski trip around a mountain inside the arctic circle (if ever I can get out of Australia)
I travel freely and use low priced INR monitoring tools to manage myself totally. I drink what I want (just polishing off a beer now, will have a wine with dinner) I eat what I want (broccoli and pork for dinner tonight) and I hunt and hike and canoe. There is so much ******** written about warfarin / coumadine and anticoagulation I can only offer this:
to wipe it up
enjoy life and life will probably not change as much as you fear post surgery (mine hasn't after 3 surgeries)
Me in 2009, 3 years before my last surgery ( which was my third, prompted by discovery of aneyrysm in 2011)
and teaching my Australian mates who came to Finland for our wedding XC skiing
Then, me 2 years after my last surgery back in Finland again and training:
Before I joined here I'd never been "horrified" about the prospects, or even ever heard anyone around me "scared shitless" about this sort of thing. Perhaps Australians are too stupid to be .. dunno
anyway, my POINT is this:
not only is there life after surgery, its can even be a better one
Best Wishes