your understanding is correct but it goes further
- this treatment is not 'infinite' in its duration and is under constant attack
- because the "bio" valves are not living no materials within them can be repaired or regenerated, so like a leather wallet they wear out from simple repeated mechanical bending (every beat)
- there is almost no chance of them being "rejected" (I've never once heard or read of it but I'm reluctant to say "no chance"
IF you are genuinely interested in this topic much is written, but the usual process is that people only say they want to inform themselves, my observation is in the main they want to research that their position was the right one. The following is excellent reading if you are genuinely interested
https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/JAHA.120.018506
The summary position is this:
- at some point in a human lifespan a leather valve works to confer advantages
- at some other points it works sufficiently for the expected duration of the person
- women in childbearing years can avoid the difficulty of managing warfarin (which we see isn't really that difficult)
- at some other point (younger) the choice to get leather will ruin you more than it will help you. (*for instance I had my 3rd OHS as a mechanical at 47, its now already 10 years old. If I get to 67 it will be 20 years old and I'd have nearly zero chance it would be still functioning)
- people are crazy about warfarin and are in the main misinformed, this drives decisions not based on substance but on emotions.
- it is very unlikely that I will ever need a reoperation driven by my valve - even if I live another 30 years. IF I even make 75 the last thing I'd want is the thread of another OHS (having had 3), for my health would surely be impacted negatively by that.
- people only think in black and white (often death or not death) but there are many other factors they ignore (and are not published)
Best Wishes