Captain Cavemen
Member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2021
- Messages
- 21
Thank you all for your valued responses and experiences to my previous posts. I have read a lot of threads on this forum and it is definitely the most rational and informed on the web you are all incredibly brave and also very giving.
Now for a more subtle question, just how do you control those nerves? I'm lucky in a sense that my condition Aortic Stenosis and aneurysm has been found. I'm also fortunate to have one of the best surgeons in the UK at a top heart hospital the Royal Brompton. So where has all this anxiety come from, obviously the prospect of OHS is enough to scare the wits out of anyone and this must be normal particularly if your a husband and parent to young ones. The trouble is it comes in unpredictable waves of confidence followed by "I don't think I will survive this" thoughts.
I think my main worries must be common or experienced by many these are:
1. Have I made the correct valve choice? I have provisionally decided on the Edwards Resilia valve but I'm not particularly averse to mechanical the surgeon said decide on the day if you want. The surgeon is very confident with this valve and presented the risks for this tissue valve versus the risks associated with mechanical and long term anti coagulation / annual risks, versus reoperation risks. I think the surgeon genuinely believes that this valve along with future valve in valve offers a credible alternative to a mechanical prosthesis for people in my age group. Noting that a mechanical valve would be the normal recommendation for patients in my age group and one that I can see is a common choice for members of this forum. As part of the pre op they have assessed me for TVAR and all looks ok. Saying all that reading Dick0236 posts is very inspirational in terms of mechanical valve longevity.
2. For some reason the aneurysm repair really worries me I know its 'only a pipe' and I can't quite pin down exactly where my fears come from. Its possible something as primal as how / will it all stay in place.
3. Do people ever fully recover from these surgeries and is it possible to be the old me again? The last part is a bit self indulgent but it is important for all of us I guess.
4. I'm having this surgery done minimally invasively via a mini / hemi sternotomy for which I'm grateful. For some reason this is psychologically very important to me but I see some centres particularlly in the US do this operation via a Right Anterior Thoracotomy and this now frustrates me and makes me think why can't they all do it like this, why haven't they got a lifelong tissue valve blah blah blah. I know there are good technical reasons for this in terms of access and doing the best job.
Once again your experiences of these concerns and how you dealt with them will be greatly welcomed.
Now for a more subtle question, just how do you control those nerves? I'm lucky in a sense that my condition Aortic Stenosis and aneurysm has been found. I'm also fortunate to have one of the best surgeons in the UK at a top heart hospital the Royal Brompton. So where has all this anxiety come from, obviously the prospect of OHS is enough to scare the wits out of anyone and this must be normal particularly if your a husband and parent to young ones. The trouble is it comes in unpredictable waves of confidence followed by "I don't think I will survive this" thoughts.
I think my main worries must be common or experienced by many these are:
1. Have I made the correct valve choice? I have provisionally decided on the Edwards Resilia valve but I'm not particularly averse to mechanical the surgeon said decide on the day if you want. The surgeon is very confident with this valve and presented the risks for this tissue valve versus the risks associated with mechanical and long term anti coagulation / annual risks, versus reoperation risks. I think the surgeon genuinely believes that this valve along with future valve in valve offers a credible alternative to a mechanical prosthesis for people in my age group. Noting that a mechanical valve would be the normal recommendation for patients in my age group and one that I can see is a common choice for members of this forum. As part of the pre op they have assessed me for TVAR and all looks ok. Saying all that reading Dick0236 posts is very inspirational in terms of mechanical valve longevity.
2. For some reason the aneurysm repair really worries me I know its 'only a pipe' and I can't quite pin down exactly where my fears come from. Its possible something as primal as how / will it all stay in place.
3. Do people ever fully recover from these surgeries and is it possible to be the old me again? The last part is a bit self indulgent but it is important for all of us I guess.
4. I'm having this surgery done minimally invasively via a mini / hemi sternotomy for which I'm grateful. For some reason this is psychologically very important to me but I see some centres particularlly in the US do this operation via a Right Anterior Thoracotomy and this now frustrates me and makes me think why can't they all do it like this, why haven't they got a lifelong tissue valve blah blah blah. I know there are good technical reasons for this in terms of access and doing the best job.
Once again your experiences of these concerns and how you dealt with them will be greatly welcomed.
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