Hi Paul
Paul;n872478 said:
I am three months out of surgery with an artifical aortic valve. I have been banging and clicking away like crazy,
3 months out is a tough time. I recall being quite negative about things and feeling pretty bad that things were getting worse. I too had no symptoms going in (as it was an aneurysm identification which drove the surgery timetable).
Its true I'd had 2 previous surgeries (repair at 10 homograft a 28) but my surgery at 48 felt quiet different.
developed afib (something I had to figure out on my own at home ) and am taking 160 mg of sotalol twice a day, my leg still has that dead frozen felling from the incision for the by pass machine, they said there was a possible infection on my old valve so I had a pic line put in my arm with home antibiotics every morning for a month with a blood test every friday ( all were negative for infection) , the only saving grace is my inr is finally stable at 6 mg a day of warfarin.
I got my infection surface much later ... almost (2 days short) a year after my 2011 surgery I was in having "debridement" operations (I had 2 cos the first didn't work) to attempt to control the infection.
Did they tell you what the bacteria was?
I did every thing right but it feels like it was the worst decision on my life. I have been waiting 39 years for this surgery and I can tell you it sure didnt turn out like the brochure said.
life often doesn't ... my wife (who was never sick in her life) died of a brain tumor caused by an agressive cancer about 6 months after my surgery ...
The sales pitch of "you may hear a little clicking but you will get used to it" is a load of crap...my valve pounds so hard its like a monkey hitting a tire with a rubber hammer on my collar
that's about how mine feels ... more so after they did the debridement behind the sternum on the second operation.
Given your string of "good luck" it would be your luck that a tissue valve would have packed in, requiring a reoperation, then you'd have got an infection (as one of my friends did) and have to have your sternum removed totally on the reoperation (he got MSR, I got off "easy" with Propioni)
told my wife that I only want it two ways ether they fix me or kill me but dont make me a basket case......Im still on the fence but time is running out.
I tole my wife something similar ... then after she died and I was being wheeled into the surgery for the infection **** and scrape I made the mistake of telling the staff that I wished I would just die during surgery ... sort of fix it all up like it should have been (it was pure luck that the aneurysm was identified) naturally they called a psychiatrist and labelled me as a suicide risk.
My research on previous cases resembling mine showed the following flowchart:
unlike those patients (and perhaps due to the sound worded arguments both my surgeon and I had with my infection specialist (on different occasions) I remain on oral antibiotics 3 times per day till this day ... probably till I want to give up and die.
Well 5 years later here I sit ...
I sent you a PM ... if you want to talk
Best Wishes