DrCooper
Member
Hi everyone,
First of all I wanted to say I've been watching and admiring the amazing community in this forum for almost a decade, but this is my first post. It is comforting to see so many people here living normal lives after the surgery and offering their experiences. Thanks for being such great company on this journey! <3
I'm 33 years old and have been aware of my BAV since my childhood years and monitoring it regularly. It was stable for a long time, but since 7 years it has been worsening quite fast. Long story short in 2016 all values were on the mild range while since a couple of years I'm on the severe / critical range.
I have been mostly asymptomatic even though currently I don't do very high intensity sports anymore and limiting myself only to brisk walks and moderate cycling. I stopped being active as every period of my life I was getting more into shape and fit my next echo was coming progressive. So to my mind I associated exercise with my progression.
The reason my cardiologist did not refer me earlier for surgery is due to the fact that my LVEF has been quite solid (~60%) so he was like as long as the heart function is stable we keep monitoring. But last year he suggested me to start preparing for it as he sees a big change in pressure gradient, LV mass and ascending aorta diameters.
Both the cardiologist and the surgeon he referred me to, think that a mechanical valve and aorta replacement is the way to go. After researching a lot of the medical literature and the posts here and on the reddit sub, I came to the same conclusion as well. They suggested the On-X and I think this better suits my risk appetite, assuming it's quite newer and less tested in the long-term compared to St. Jude, but has gotten FDA approval for lower INR.
Rationally, I know that the odds are on my side and I will likely live a normal life.
But despite this... in the last years I have been filled with huge anxiety about the future. As a person I always think of the worse and fear that I will get sick e.g. get a stroke and become a "burden" to my family. Struggling to enjoy nice moments such as holidays or breaks. Not sure if this will improve after surgery (it might even get worse), but it's affecting the relationship with my family and work, as I'm quite often irritable and not nice, and want to be more and more on my own thoughts.
Did any of you experience a similar situation?
First of all I wanted to say I've been watching and admiring the amazing community in this forum for almost a decade, but this is my first post. It is comforting to see so many people here living normal lives after the surgery and offering their experiences. Thanks for being such great company on this journey! <3
I'm 33 years old and have been aware of my BAV since my childhood years and monitoring it regularly. It was stable for a long time, but since 7 years it has been worsening quite fast. Long story short in 2016 all values were on the mild range while since a couple of years I'm on the severe / critical range.
I have been mostly asymptomatic even though currently I don't do very high intensity sports anymore and limiting myself only to brisk walks and moderate cycling. I stopped being active as every period of my life I was getting more into shape and fit my next echo was coming progressive. So to my mind I associated exercise with my progression.
The reason my cardiologist did not refer me earlier for surgery is due to the fact that my LVEF has been quite solid (~60%) so he was like as long as the heart function is stable we keep monitoring. But last year he suggested me to start preparing for it as he sees a big change in pressure gradient, LV mass and ascending aorta diameters.
Both the cardiologist and the surgeon he referred me to, think that a mechanical valve and aorta replacement is the way to go. After researching a lot of the medical literature and the posts here and on the reddit sub, I came to the same conclusion as well. They suggested the On-X and I think this better suits my risk appetite, assuming it's quite newer and less tested in the long-term compared to St. Jude, but has gotten FDA approval for lower INR.
Rationally, I know that the odds are on my side and I will likely live a normal life.
But despite this... in the last years I have been filled with huge anxiety about the future. As a person I always think of the worse and fear that I will get sick e.g. get a stroke and become a "burden" to my family. Struggling to enjoy nice moments such as holidays or breaks. Not sure if this will improve after surgery (it might even get worse), but it's affecting the relationship with my family and work, as I'm quite often irritable and not nice, and want to be more and more on my own thoughts.
Did any of you experience a similar situation?