AmandaPS
Member
Greetings,
I have been lurking on this board for some time and decided to de-lurk today in order to thank you all. My 36-year-old husband is having his bicuspid valve replaced on Monday by Dr. McCarthy at Northwestern in Chicago. He was born with a BAV, so we always knew surgery would happen someday. Once "someday" had a name and date, though, it has been a whirlwind of activity and info overload.
I am immensely grateful for this board. I think I've read TheGymGuy's weekly surgery and recovery recaps about 6 times (also had the hubby read them) and they've really helped us prepare. I will try to take good notes in the coming weeks and collaborate with my husband so that I can hopefully give back by writing a couple posts myself.
I've been coping by buying things that help me feel prepared, including a heart rate monitor so we can compare current heart rate to post-surgery/recovery heart rate, Adam Pick's e-book, a recliner, some pillows, a heart pillow with my husband's favorite baseball team logo, and these easy on and off 'shoulder shirts'. After the shirts, I had to stop myself! I guess I'll be able to report soon on how useful or not useful these items are.
Thanks for sharing your stories. You've really helped me.
Amanda
I have been lurking on this board for some time and decided to de-lurk today in order to thank you all. My 36-year-old husband is having his bicuspid valve replaced on Monday by Dr. McCarthy at Northwestern in Chicago. He was born with a BAV, so we always knew surgery would happen someday. Once "someday" had a name and date, though, it has been a whirlwind of activity and info overload.
I am immensely grateful for this board. I think I've read TheGymGuy's weekly surgery and recovery recaps about 6 times (also had the hubby read them) and they've really helped us prepare. I will try to take good notes in the coming weeks and collaborate with my husband so that I can hopefully give back by writing a couple posts myself.
I've been coping by buying things that help me feel prepared, including a heart rate monitor so we can compare current heart rate to post-surgery/recovery heart rate, Adam Pick's e-book, a recliner, some pillows, a heart pillow with my husband's favorite baseball team logo, and these easy on and off 'shoulder shirts'. After the shirts, I had to stop myself! I guess I'll be able to report soon on how useful or not useful these items are.
Thanks for sharing your stories. You've really helped me.
Amanda