Hello again, I wanted to catch everyone up on the news about my surgery. I had my surgery on the April 18th, as planned, and all has gone well! There were a small few hitches along the way, but I was able to be released five days after surgery as planned. I had surgery to repair an aneurysm and to replace my bicusp. aortic valve (it couldn't be repaired). I ended up going to the Cleveland Clinic, and having an aortic valve root, ascending aorta and hemiarch replacement with composite graft and including a 27mm Carpentier Edwards pericardial valve and a 32mm Hemashield graft. Dr Gosta Pettersson did the surgery.
The worst part of it all for me was waking up in ICU with the breathing tube in--wanted to pull that thing out and tried several times. Finally they took it out and put me on oxygen. I ended up getting nauseated and barfed all over my incision! While in ICU I had a TIA episode, my left arm went numb/weak, I was foggy-headed, and had some vision problems (similar to a migraine) and poor balance. They moved me to a stepdown room, but the TIA stuff lasted for 21/2 days. During that time I remained foggey-headed, and pulled my catheter out (ouch!). Then, on the Sunday after my surgery, it all seemed to clear up. I was after 5 days released, after having had a CAT scan and MRI which showed a very small amount of damage to my brain which could not for certain be attributed to the TIA event. (Might have been from the 1970's for all they were able to tell me.) I'm home now, it's 11 days after my surgery, and three days since I used any pain medication other than advil.
My overall thoughts about the "surgery" process is that it was not nearly as bad as I feared it would be; I especially feared the cath angiogram, which turned out not nearly be so bad at all. After the rough couple of days coming out of surgery I felt much better and thought to myself, "if this is all i had to go through I'm pretty lucky, because I'm not in much pain at all right now, and I'm fixed!" I want those of you that have surgeries coming up to know the process you will go through is a tested one, and to breathe a little easier about the whole thing!
Ron