I'm happy as could be expected with my surgeon when I met her today - Professor Marjan Jahangiri - at St Anthony's Hospital, Sutton (London). She will do a short sternotomy cut and she will use a bovine valve. But I'm not happy with the speed of all this. She wanted to do the operation before Christmas but has said that we can wait till early January instead when I said I wouldn't like to be discharged over Christmas when lots of doctors are on holiday and GP surgeries close over the holiday period in case I need help.
But early January is still tons earlier than I really wanted - I shall be so worried about my husband driving to and from the hospital in the snow and ice if we get bad weather like we often do that time of year - the UK cannot cope with adverse weather. I would have rather the op in March or spring time but the Professor didn't think I'd make it till then. She felt my valve was too narrowed and that, even though I feel well now, I could suddenly go into heart failure
Makes me now wonder what I'm supposed to do to stop my heart going into failure - take to my bed ? Not do so much walking ? I love walking. I have given up weight lifting but I am still walking several miles a day - does that put a strain on my heart ?
My pressure gradient is 68 mm/HG and my valve area size is 0.9 sq cm, but there's no sings of LV failure and my Ejection Fraction is a good 79% - surely it couldn't be so good if my heart was having trouble getting the blood through the valve ?
I also wasn't happy about the risk of osteoporotic fractures which I have heard can occur with this type of surgery - the Professor said she had done lots of ops on older people who would have had osteoporosis and they were fine, but to me it's a very big worry. I would want the surgical team to be very aware that I have osteoporosis and to lift me carefully...but I don't know how to get that across.
But early January is still tons earlier than I really wanted - I shall be so worried about my husband driving to and from the hospital in the snow and ice if we get bad weather like we often do that time of year - the UK cannot cope with adverse weather. I would have rather the op in March or spring time but the Professor didn't think I'd make it till then. She felt my valve was too narrowed and that, even though I feel well now, I could suddenly go into heart failure
Makes me now wonder what I'm supposed to do to stop my heart going into failure - take to my bed ? Not do so much walking ? I love walking. I have given up weight lifting but I am still walking several miles a day - does that put a strain on my heart ?
My pressure gradient is 68 mm/HG and my valve area size is 0.9 sq cm, but there's no sings of LV failure and my Ejection Fraction is a good 79% - surely it couldn't be so good if my heart was having trouble getting the blood through the valve ?
I also wasn't happy about the risk of osteoporotic fractures which I have heard can occur with this type of surgery - the Professor said she had done lots of ops on older people who would have had osteoporosis and they were fine, but to me it's a very big worry. I would want the surgical team to be very aware that I have osteoporosis and to lift me carefully...but I don't know how to get that across.