Geofd
Well-known member
Hello brand new to this forum, just found out I'm gonna need surgery,I have severe regurgitation, and flailing???? I think,don't know all the terms yet,but need surgeryJust looking for insight on repair, replacement thanks
Hello brand new to this forum, just found out I'm gonna need surgery,I have severe regurgitation, and flailing???? I think,don't know all the terms yet,but need surgeryJust looking for insight on repair, replacement thanks
Welcome to the wall, Geofd. We have different experiences but we can only share person experience. I think your first step is talk to the Cardio or surgeon about what will be done. Then you get educated on terms and procedures you will go under before surgery and what to expect during and after. It makes things less scary when you learn what you can before surgery. There are those of us that has been in this since birth or just after, or during child hood, or at adult stage.Hello brand new to this forum, just found out I'm gonna need surgery,I have severe regurgitation, and flailing???? I think,don't know all the terms yet,but need surgeryJust looking for insight on repair, replacement thanks
,what I have read about biological valves is they have a life spans
Yes that's what I have also understood from reading different posts from diffrent forumsYes, they do have limited lifespans.
This study found this this particular tissue valve in the mitral position lasted 14.2 years on average.
"
CONCLUSIONS
In the selected patients aged 65 years or younger undergoing MVR with the CE PERIMOUNT bioprosthesis, the expected valve durability was 14.2 years."
https://academic.oup.com/ejcts/article/54/2/302/4851223
But, this is important:
"Conflict of interest: Thierry Bourguignon is consultant for Edwards Lifesciences. Pascal Candolfi is employee of Edwards Lifesciences, Department of Biostatistics."
Edwards Lifesciences makes this valve that was studied. This is not to say that we toss the study out, but it means that they had every motivation to present the valve in the best light possible and likely used selection criterial to maximize the life expectancy for the valve.
If you did as well as the average selected individuals in this study, that would mean a reoperation at about age 74 for you. Something to consider in making your valve choice, if repair is not an option.
This is also a very interesting comment from the conclusion:
"these findings suggest that bioprosthetic MVR using a PERIMOUNT valve may be a reasonable alternative to mechanical prosthetic valve replacement in fully informed young patients who wish to avoid the lifestyle limitations associated with lifelong anticoagulation."
The bold is mine. What they did not say is, perhaps, more important than what they did say, but they did choose their words carefully. What they did not say was that it is a reasonable choice for those who wish to have the longest life expectancy. Those that would benefit financially from repeat customers often play up the spookiness of anticoagulants, most of which turns out to be myth.
Enter your email address to join: