I got an On-X 23mm aortic valve last Sep 14th, 2023. I returned to serious weightlifting in January, 2024, which was 4 months after surgery.When is it ok to start lifting weights etc, in your experience?
hi don i am having a tough decision as to what valve to have both have negatives but i see prior to your operation you had the same issues can you please tell me now that you decided on the mechanical valve do you have any regrets and is there anything i should be aware of it i choose to have the mechanical valve thank you
I got an On-X 23mm aortic valve last Sep 14th, 2023. I returned to serious weightlifting in January, 2024, which was 4 months after surgery.
I had been exercising seriously, including weightlifting, until 2 days before my surgery. I understand weightlifting, and I understand my own body. However, I was very weak by January, 2024 when I started weightlifting again. I had to be patient and careful as I increased my activity. I feel that I am now at 90% of my pre-surgery strength and endurance. Good luck!
I listened to Timmay last winter when I graduated from cardiac rehab and was cleared to start lifting more than 20 lbs. My exercise is using light weights (20 lb dumbbells), exercise rubber bands, and body weight. I perform many repetitions in a slow, controlled manner. I listen carefully to my body while exercising; if it hurts, I stop doing that exercise, or modify that exercise to be within my limits.I would not lift weights at all for an entire year after surgery. If I felt compelled to lift some thing in terms of weights, I would keep the weight ridiculously low.
Timmay,Don,
Be careful. I had my aortic valve replaced in May 2022. I had a goal of bench pressing 135 for 10 slow reps with perfect form at six months after surgery. I accomplished this. However, I believe that this *may* have contributed to issues that I currently experience to this day. Up until that six month goal. I felt awesome and was doing great. It wasn’t until directly after achieving this goal that I started experiencing issues. From that point forward, any strenuous activity could lead to premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) and a general feeling of total exhaustion that would take a week or so to recover from. Granted, my workout routine was relatively fast paced and tough. But, it wasn’t anything new to me as I was doing the exact routine for years prior to surgery (10 sets of 10 reps in back to back succession. 1 minute break. Repeat two more times. 300 reps in about 25 minutes or so).
If I could do things all over again, I would not lift weights at all for an entire year after surgery. If I felt compelled to lift some thing in terms of weights, I would keep the weight ridiculously low. I would focus more on walking and walking and walking and walking. I would then switch over to some light, jogging, and/or cardio.
I absolutely love working out with weights. I have done it for 35 years ever since I was in high school. However, I can no longer lift weights as aggressively as I once did. That makes me kind of sad. But, the thankfulness and happiness of being given this second chance at life with this mechanical valve far outweighs any of that. I am blessed.
I think a lot of what individuals need to do for recovery depends on their age. I was 50 when my valve was replaced. I shouldn’t have expected to recover like the 20 or 30 year olds on this forum. I should have given myself much more time to recover and allow my heart to remodel.
Not always easy to get appointments with Doctors but this would be the best thing to do.I would ask your doctor. I know for me, my docs always told me no weight lifting or wrestling (I am allowed to do light resistance training, just not heavy stuff), but each of us is different. I don't think this had anything to do with my valve, but other issues (because I had a congenital coarctation, I believe I will always have elevated blood pressure even though it is currently controlled with meds).
I not planning to lift crazy weight myself just some weight to assist with general fitness.I listened to Timmay last winter when I graduated from cardiac rehab and was cleared to start lifting more than 20 lbs. My exercise is using light weights (20 lb dumbbells), exercise rubber bands, and body weight. I perform many repetitions in a slow, controlled manner. I listen carefully to my body while exercising; if it hurts, I stop doing that exercise, or modify that exercise to be within my limits.
Life is a journey; exercise is part of that journey. We want to continue to move forward, and sometimes we need to adjust the pace.
wiseyes we need to progress but not at any cost
The thing on the weight restriction is that it takes the muscles and the sternum one year to heal, and that takes time. Not that everyone is different, it takes a year for your body to heal from the surgery. Muscles are in trauma from the cutting and the sternum from the separation of the rib cage during surgery.I would ask your doctor. I know for me, my docs always told me no weight lifting or wrestling (I am allowed to do light resistance training, just not heavy stuff), but each of us is different. I don't think this had anything to do with my valve, but other issues (because I had a congenital coarctation, I believe I will always have elevated blood pressure even though it is currently controlled with meds).
Actually a sternotomy does NOT cut muscles. The muscles do not cross the sternum centerline. See Dr. Thoralf Sundt article at:Muscles are in trauma from the cutting
Totally no argument from me on that point.Actually a sternotomy does NOT cut muscles.
My mitral valve surgery was between the ribs, though not robotic. The incision was just under five inches long, in the crease under my right breast, so the scar is essentially invisible now. It took probably a month to heal, though, not "7-10 days." And the holes from my chest tube and drain were draining fluid for three weeks.However I recall some surgeries for mitral go between the ribs. I Google searched and found this...
Spot on mate, the idea is to improve not counter proudctivewise
we should exercise for health (not vanity) and so if what you do is damaging you then that's counter productive.
Enter your email address to join: