pellicle
Professional Dingbat, Guru and Merkintologist
sounds to me like you are in the waiting room for a while longer then.
pellicle;n875979 said:sounds to me like you are in the waiting room for a while longer then.
NDNMD;n875981 said:Doctor thinks 15-20 years
pellicle;n875982 said:perfect
plenty of time for evolution of technology and procedures.
I know that may sound like frustration, but deferred surgery is better than post surgical complications my friend.
besides if you pick a tissue prosthetic you'll be in the same 10~15 year boat straight away (with the risk of post surgical complications thrown in for good luck)
Did the doc say you couldn't lift heavy weights ? I was lucky in that I didn't have to cut down on the weights I lifted until literally the time I was referred for surgery - I was lifting heavy weights when I had moderate to severe stenosis and it was only when it reached critical that I had to lighten the weights.NDNMD;n875983 said:I agree! I am in no hurry for surgery. The frustrating thing will be the degeneration and increasing risk over time. I used to lift heavy weights--now i can't. That is the only immediate change to my life.
Paleowoman;n875987 said:Did the doc say you couldn't lift heavy weights ? I was lucky in that I didn't have to cut down on the weights I lifted until literally the time I was referred for surgery - I was lifting heavy weights when I had moderate to severe stenosis and it was only when it reached critical that I had to lighten the weights.
Ah I see, yes the risk of aortic dissection would mean not lifting heavy weights.NDNMD;n875990 said:Doc said I could not lift any weights such that it caused holding breath or failure to lift--it raises blood pressure too high. He said to lift such that I did sets of 12-15 repetitions instead of what I used to do for building muscle: sets of 3-5 repetitions. The risk factor isn't stenosis, but aortic tear or dissection.
NDNMD;n885183 said:I just had a new mri done. My left-ventricular noncompaction is causing cardiomyopathy. My LV ejection fraction is down to 51%. I will ask in my next appointment in a month whether there are previous readings to baseline, but I feel like this is pretty bad news overall. It feels as if I’m progressing down a bad path overall. I don’t have the energy I used to when working out, and I thought it was just age. Heart failure in my 30s doesn’t give me much confidence of having a long life, especially with the aorta at 42mm now.
NDNMD;n885183 said:I just had a new mri done. My left-ventricular noncompaction is causing cardiomyopathy. My LV ejection fraction is down to 51%. ...Heart failure in my 30s doesn’t give me much confidence of having a long life, especially with the aorta at 42mm now.
rakesh1167;n885195 said:Do you still lift weights?
pellicle;n885197 said:I would expect that your imminent surgical intervention will probably turn that around, so its not "bad news" but just that the indicators have moved on to a point where surgery is the best option (and trust me, nobody wants surgery as a hobby or because they wanted some entertainment).
My life was turned around twice by surgery (the third I was still doing well but aneurysm could see that change rapidly) ... look on the bright side ;-)
NDNMD;n885198 said:I still do, yes. I haven't yet talked to my cardiologist since the latest MRI.
rakesh1167;n885200 said:My Aorta was 2.1 in 2008. I started lifting heavy(at-least for me) weights and it grew to 3.8 in 2013. Stopped lifting weights, it has been stable for now.
I had AVR in 2016, i requested my Surgeon to replace Aorta too which he didn't since size was < 42 mm. If he had done that, i would have started lifting weights again.
I know that it is likely that Aorta will increase in size one day, but if i start lifting weights it will be much sooner. It may not be the factor for everyone, but for some it is.
I would advice you to stop lifting weights, brisk walking is safest. I know it can be very hard(it was for me).
I don't mean to scare you. Don't worry, surgery will fix you. But you should try to delay it if possible.
matty;n885206 said:I'm not much older than you. I had surgery at 40. I found out by accident about my heart issues and getting to surgery was a bit of a whirlwind at the time. I had severe left ventricular hypertrophy, severe regurgitation and an aortic aneurysm of 4.7 cm. I feel like my heavy weight lifting on and off over 20 years contributed to the deterioration of my undiagnosed bicuspid valve and aorta. I used to squat 180 kg at times, to give you an idea of the weight i was pushing. Normally low reps and high sets.
The heart is pretty amazing. I had my 2 year post surgery follow up yesterday and all my heart measurements are normal. My EF is normal now at 56%. Your heart doesn't have to recover much at all to get to a normal EF. I think some cardiologists would still say 51% is low normal ?
From researching the safety of weight training after valve/ aortic surgery what i kind of gathered is that it's the blood pressure spikes that you need to be wary of. There are people who train heavy after surgery, I personally won't, but I feel comfortable with exercises like push ups and dips as long as I am very careful with my breathing. With any resistance training after surgery I think you should avoid doing the valsalva maneuver and learn to breath properly to keep your blood pressure down (there are techniques for this).
I did have a chat with a member of this forum regarding weight training and he said he is the strongest now he's ever been after getting his mechanical valve and he does do valsalva. I remember at the time he was squatting substantially more than I used to but I dont think he had an aortic graft.
On the topic of valve replacement and heavy weight lifting checkout the documentary "CT Fletcher: My Magnificent Obsession". There's not much in there about his mechanical valve but it's interesting and at times comical if you're not offended by a potty mouth.
Enter your email address to join: