My doctors told me that an IUD was the best type of birth control to use with a mechanical valve and warfarin, as there is a risk of clots with oral and other types of birth control. (The risk is inherent in the drugs themselves and not related to the use of warfarin.)
What type of IUD is he recommending? There is the Mirena IUD which contains progesterone and is "supposed" to be relatively safe for us female 'valvers'. However, one doctor told me that the risk of endocarditis is
there (although low) and he definitely recommends antibiotic prophylaxis prior to an IUD being placed.
Pellicle, I am impressed with your knowledge base.
gosh I love the diversity of questions here. Of course I have no experience in this (being a male) but I would suggest it depends on if you use a hormonal or metal (say copper) one. I would not expect them to be causing any substantial tissue damage normally and so if you are not experiencing bleeding from using it pre-warfarin then you should be fine post.
I'll be interested to read any experiences or more informed views.
Best Wishes
I will share my experience once I get it done.
Pellicle, I am impressed with your knowledge base.
I read somewhere that the Mirena IUD causes lot of bleeding but I must talk to a doctor I suppose.
I never heard anything about a risk of getting endocarditis that makes me nervous since I had it once and NEVER want to get it again
:redface2:
well I guess it all started because as a 5YO I was taken out of all sports (liked them, especially nippers) and banned from sports at School because I had a <hammerHorrorMusic>Heart Condition</hammerHorrorMusic>. So sports days were confined to library days till after I was about 13 and everyone was happy with the (nowadays called) remodeling of my heart.
By then it was too late ... I had already developed a mild case of "Shedlon Syndrome".
There is no cure for this disease
My wife had good results with a thing called a nuva-ringdreamy885;n875893 said:I'm normally very anti-hormonal birth control, but I'm left with not much choice.
-Heather
pellicle;n875935 said:My wife had good results with a thing called a nuva-ring
https://www.plannedparenthood.org/learn/birth-control/birth-control-******l-ring-nuvaring
dornole;n875929 said:Well, it's not like they can force you to have a hysterectomy later. You'd only do later at your choice to control the symptoms. From a paper:
Endometrial ablation is a minimally invasive procedure for menorrhagia. High success rates are documented with >90% of patients experiencing satisfaction. However, adequate relief after endometrial ablation is not obtained in a cohort of patients. The purpose of this study is to identify the characteristics of patients for whom endometrial ablation fails due to persistent symptoms, causing them to choose hysterectomy for definitive treatment.
So even if you are "more likely" for it not to work due to your age, that still might not be a big risk with a 90% success rate. This was not even mentioned to me when I had an ablation at about age 40. Note, ablation IS NOT a guaranteed birth control technique (at least that's what they told me). So your flow and your fertility are separate issues.
I'm also guessing your cardiologist may not be a fan of hormonal control as it increases your clotting risk - at least pills do, I am not sure about Mirena.
Are your docs telling you that "any future surgery will likely be very risky"? Is this a special double valve replacement issue? Many people on here with mechanical valves and on warfarin have had significant surgery. Tubal ligation is a small surgery and ablation even easier. . . . Or what about a tubal implant for your birth control, that goes in via the route nature provided, no cutting that way either.
You're right you need to check with your doc, but might also need to check with them about some assumptions you are making to make sure they're accurate for you specifically.
.
In our case the way it went down was - I had requested ligation to be done post-delivery in the hospital as we were done having kids, but that pregnancy went to heck due to the sudden onset of heart symptoms. The perinatologist called in to do the emergency delivery said "ain't got time for that" and literally whipped his finger around to my husband and said "YOU take care of that - get a vasectomy." He tried but the urologist told him he was a bad candidate! So after I recovered I did get a tubal which is probably for the best as they recommended I never get pregnant again by any person, and it's my womb. I had to go off the aspirin for several days which carried some risk of stroke but not a lot. Obviously warfarin is a bigger deal but judging from others' comments, it's workable and your doc may still consider a tubal ligation the best solution for you. They can also can advise whether ablation, hormonal control of bleeding, or putting up with it is your best option for the heavy bleeding.
Hoping others can chime in their experiences with IUD, but I wanted you to get "some" response . . . you're right to examine the options carefully.
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