vv7814
New member
Has anyone undergone Mitral valve and Aortic valve replacement with minimally invasive surgery, not open heart. Would appreciate your feedback. Where was it done if you had it done?
Hi and welcome.
I haven't had minimally invasive surgery (some here have) but you have to ask yourself why you're interested in it.
If the answer is that you're freaked out about having the surgical wound then put aside that and stop focusing on what you really don't know much about (the surgery) and return your attention to what's within your control (which is proper recovery and any decisions you are asked to make about valve).
Make your decisions strongly biased on actual scientific data, not what some shill website says (hello Adam Pick) who makes a living being an infotainer and shills products for valve makers and clinics and surgeons.
I would strongly caution about seeking out someone who does that specific thing (like minimal invasive) and instead seek out:
Best Wishes
- a good history of no post surgical complications
- a good hospital with a well regarded post surgical care and very low post surgical infection rates
- somewhere conveniently located because trust me, you don't want to be travelling far
PS: I just looked at your BIO to see if you'd put in your age, saw you read Adam's book LOL'd ... I recommend you put that primary school level (metaphor) stuff down now and start on with middle and highschool level education for your reading
bPeer Reviewed Journal is what you want to be reading (not fluff)
Its harder reading but ...
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second opinion is good.I just found out about the mitral valve and aortic valve stenosis through the echo and the surgeon recommended open heart surgery. I am not sure which way or where to go. I am getting a second opinion today. Hopefully that will be helpful.
I had Mitral valve replacement with minimally invasive surgery on September 22nd, 2022, at Grandview Medical center Birmingham AL by Doctor John Richardson.Has anyone undergone Mitral valve and Aortic valve replacement with minimally invasive surgery, not open heart. Would appreciate your feedback. Where was it done if you had it done?
I had MVR (St. Jude mechanical) 19 1/2 years ago. No problem with warfarin and I home-test. My native valve failed due to myxomatous tissue (degeneration).Has anyone undergone Mitral valve and Aortic valve replacement with minimally invasive surgery, not open heart. Would appreciate your feedback. Where was it done if you had it done?
I had minimally invasive aortic valve replacement via right anterior mini thoracotomy at UAB Hospital (University of Alabama in Birmingham) by Dr. Clifton Lewis in October 2019.Has anyone undergone Mitral valve and Aortic valve replacement with minimally invasive surgery, not open heart. Would appreciate your feedback. Where was it done if you had it done?
he has no formal qualifications, started off knowing nothing about medical things (education not in physiology or biology). Strongly opinionated seldom quotes peer reviewed data. Predominately showcases surgeons and advocates techniques he really knows nothing about.is that Adam Pick site really that bad?
What happens to the chest muscles is the stretching and trauma. It will be sore, from time to time, till it is completely healed, in a year's time. Tubes are only temp, and you will be healed from them soon. Just relax and let the body heal itself. And glad you were on less time on the pump (the heart and lung machine).Hi, I underwent aortic valve replacement (St.Jude) via minithoracotomy at the University of Iowa Hospital (Iowa City) 4 weeks ago. I chose this surgery because it is less invasive than open heart surgery and the post-operative course is somehow, smoother with less pain. My surgeon, Dr. Bashir, did specific training in this type of surgery and he has been doing it for at least 5 years now! The surgery took 3:30 hours, which puts you on a shorter time on the bypass machine! I stayed at the hospital for 5 days (including the operation day) and my main complaint was pain due to chest tubes (it was really that bad for me), otherwise, I didn't have any complications. The only thing that I was not informed about, maybe I didn't do enough research prior to surgery, is the numbness around the incision site. For me, it is slowly improving but I am not sure if it will completely vanish or not. Please let me know if you have any questions!
having spent an amount of time in Japan, Korea and a lesser extent China, and all I can say is that each place has its own standards of what "literacy" means and what amount of vocab is needed. Just so that I get an angry face on this I'll say China has the lowest.(And don’t tell the Chinese).
I wish everything goes well!Thank you for all your advice. I have scheduled open heart surgery for Jan. 20 to replace both Mitral and Aortic valves at the University of Chicago Medical Center. Hopefully everything goes well.
wishing you a text book procedure and uneventful recovery.Hopefully everything goes well.
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