I just got back from a cardiac clinic.
The doctor told me that the range for Aortic valves is 2.0-3.0 -- and that for Mitral Valves, the range is 2.5-3.5. This doctor actually seemed concerned with hemorrhages at 3.5. (I've had it higher than this with no problem).
I told him that, with even a small margin of error of .2, having a meter tell me that my INR was 2.0 may actually mean that it's 1.8 -- and would put me back at risk of a TIA. (This is what happened to me last year -- although my meter said 2.6, the lab said 1.7. Personally, I'd rather shoot a bit high than be at risk with an INR that is below 2.0). To his credit, the doctor told me to shoot for 2.8.
The questions here are these: how many of you valvers with Aortic valves were told 2.0 - 3.0? Are you comfortable with an INR near 2.0? If you self-test, does a 2.0 on your meter make you feel safe from clotting?
Personally, I don't know that I would be comfortable with a 2.0 no matter which meter gave me that number.
What about you??
The doctor told me that the range for Aortic valves is 2.0-3.0 -- and that for Mitral Valves, the range is 2.5-3.5. This doctor actually seemed concerned with hemorrhages at 3.5. (I've had it higher than this with no problem).
I told him that, with even a small margin of error of .2, having a meter tell me that my INR was 2.0 may actually mean that it's 1.8 -- and would put me back at risk of a TIA. (This is what happened to me last year -- although my meter said 2.6, the lab said 1.7. Personally, I'd rather shoot a bit high than be at risk with an INR that is below 2.0). To his credit, the doctor told me to shoot for 2.8.
The questions here are these: how many of you valvers with Aortic valves were told 2.0 - 3.0? Are you comfortable with an INR near 2.0? If you self-test, does a 2.0 on your meter make you feel safe from clotting?
Personally, I don't know that I would be comfortable with a 2.0 no matter which meter gave me that number.
What about you??