Hi everyone! Can folks help me better understand the long term survival prospects for young people with mechanical aortic valves?
When I examine papers that discuss survival rates or Kaplan Meier Curves for patients with mechanical valves, most of the underlying data is from people getting their valves in their 50s, 60s, and 70s.
Oftentimes when I bring up this question, someone will either respond by saying “Hi, I’ve had a mechanical valve for 20+ years” OR they'll reference someone else who is “celebrating their XXth year anniversary with a mechanical valve.”
While these anecdotes are reassuring, it’s hard for me to know if survivorship bias is playing a role here (as in, I'm essentially looking at all the people who didn’t suffer from endocarditis, clotting/thinning or related issues that can crop up).
Any comprehensive papers, videos, or other types of resources you can point me to on this subject? Ideally the reports don't "just" show low incidence of endo, clotting, etc, but actual mortality... Thanks in advance!
When I examine papers that discuss survival rates or Kaplan Meier Curves for patients with mechanical valves, most of the underlying data is from people getting their valves in their 50s, 60s, and 70s.
Oftentimes when I bring up this question, someone will either respond by saying “Hi, I’ve had a mechanical valve for 20+ years” OR they'll reference someone else who is “celebrating their XXth year anniversary with a mechanical valve.”
While these anecdotes are reassuring, it’s hard for me to know if survivorship bias is playing a role here (as in, I'm essentially looking at all the people who didn’t suffer from endocarditis, clotting/thinning or related issues that can crop up).
Any comprehensive papers, videos, or other types of resources you can point me to on this subject? Ideally the reports don't "just" show low incidence of endo, clotting, etc, but actual mortality... Thanks in advance!
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