jgibson
Well-known member
I was concerned too
I was concerned too
Jared,
I was so concerned about the effects of pump head, that I had a long discussion with my surgeon a few days before my surgery. He seemed to lean in the direction that pump head is not as big of an issue that "some tests" have made it out to be. He also said that older patients (60's, 70's) tend to have more issues with it then younger patients do.
I remember the moment I came out from under the anesthesia. The first thing I asked my wife is "What day is it?". The reason I asked that question was due to some threads in this forum where some individuals had gone into a short coma due to whatever complications they ran into. Wanted to make sure it was still the same day.
Once I realized that it was that afternoon, I started thinking about items I do at work. I write software for a living, so I started thinking about how I would implement certain functionality. Didn't seem to have any issues with it. Thought about the days leading up to the surgery. No problems remembering things there.
The biggest thing that stood out for me was the comment my surgeon made. When I asked about the pump head, he said this. "Well, if you don't do anything, you heart will continue to enlarge. From there you will start to go into Congestive Heart Failure. At some point your heart will start to fail. At that point you will be looking at needing a heart transplant.
Anyway, it really puts it all in perspective when you think you could possibly kill yourself if you don't get your valve repaired/replaced.
I wouldn't sweat Pump Head. I think I really worried myself about it WAY to much.
Hope this helps.
I was concerned too
boomersooner said:Did anyone here at VR.com experienced pump head after their surgery? This really freaks me out. There is a study by Duke that shows 42% of people that go on the heart and lung machine lose 20% of their cognitive capacity capabilities 5 years after surgery! Has anyone been told anything different by their surgeons or anything at all about pump head?
Thanks
Jared
Jared,
I was so concerned about the effects of pump head, that I had a long discussion with my surgeon a few days before my surgery. He seemed to lean in the direction that pump head is not as big of an issue that "some tests" have made it out to be. He also said that older patients (60's, 70's) tend to have more issues with it then younger patients do.
I remember the moment I came out from under the anesthesia. The first thing I asked my wife is "What day is it?". The reason I asked that question was due to some threads in this forum where some individuals had gone into a short coma due to whatever complications they ran into. Wanted to make sure it was still the same day.
Once I realized that it was that afternoon, I started thinking about items I do at work. I write software for a living, so I started thinking about how I would implement certain functionality. Didn't seem to have any issues with it. Thought about the days leading up to the surgery. No problems remembering things there.
The biggest thing that stood out for me was the comment my surgeon made. When I asked about the pump head, he said this. "Well, if you don't do anything, you heart will continue to enlarge. From there you will start to go into Congestive Heart Failure. At some point your heart will start to fail. At that point you will be looking at needing a heart transplant.
Anyway, it really puts it all in perspective when you think you could possibly kill yourself if you don't get your valve repaired/replaced.
I wouldn't sweat Pump Head. I think I really worried myself about it WAY to much.
Hope this helps.