Hi
Justincwp;n849316 said:
I've been looking for an answer to my valve longevity question and have not came up with any information. I've been looking for an answer to my valve longevity question and have not came up with any information.
to further the post broncorod put up I'll say that in general there aren't many long term studies at all. The reasons I see for this are such things as:
* the makers are not motivated (we do live in a throw away society too right?)
* the surgeons figure that if you get 10 years you've done well (perhaps because they come from a perspective of dealing with the elderly but who can be sure)
* there are many factors to consider and it seems that those of us who are younger and healther are not the norm for valve replacement.
... I can't find any information (around the web) as to what factors may or may not influence valve longevity.
there has not been much I've found that's "direct" but lots thats indirect. Stuff like "we are doing X Y and Z to our valves to increase longevity" in both maker write-ups and discussions on what caused failures (discussions in medical journals not places like here).
Maybe valve longevity is luck.
its certainly a confluence of various factors:
* your lifestyle
* your age at implantation
* your metabolism and its quirks
how long have you had so far?
Back when I got my homograft (I was 28) I spent years wondering about when it would fail and how long it would last. My surgeon always answered this with "we just don't know". I found that the significance of the question dimmed in my going about daily life and occasionaly would resurface and I'd do some research.
Back in 1992 (when I was 28) there was little on line at all, but by 2002 there was enough of an explosion of internet data availablity and access that research did not mean going into a major State or National Library and spending days pulling out stuff. Google Scholar is the one you want to be searching via
http://scholar.google.com/
this does not return "noise" like "my aunty billy had a goat"
If it is I'll move on and hope for the best.
it is indeed what all of us do. It is all that any of us really can do. That is of course slightly different for us mechanical valvers, for we need to learn about anticoagulation a bit and manage ourselves to maximise our outcomes for the positive with our dosing and measuring. To my knowledge there is nothing that a tissue valver can do to alter outcomes.
(I can find longevity charts and graphs but never any reasons for failure)
probably because the reasons are normally the same: stenosis due to calcification. Occasionally torn leaflets. But stenosis is the main reason as far as I know.
How long have you had your valve for and how old were you when you got it?