JimEdens said:
Hi folks. I am a 48 year old male who has had a defective aortic valve since birth. This condition has led me to where I am now..... I have an enlarged heart that is now in danger of massive failure, so i am due for valve replacement surgery on the 28th of this month. Of the options that my surgeon laid out for me, I have chosen the Ross Procedure as the most viable one for me. I would, however, value very much any input that any of you fine folks may have about this procedure. Thanks in advance, Jim
Jim,
I had the Ross Procedure done at 32 -- my surgeon and cardiologist are in my signature below. I read a little bit about it and talked to some cardiologists and surgeons about the procedure, here is some of what I picked up ( some numbers vary according to who you ask ):
-- The RP is statistically best for people in the 18-40 range but remains a good idea until 55 or so. Given a 25 year average span before another operation this gives an average re-op age of 80 at 55 -- after 55 you would be better off with a tissue valve if you want to avoid coumadin ( and are not on it for other reasons ).
-- The pulmonary valve offers the best hemodynamic performance of any of the alternatives to a healthy, natural valve but the pulmonary conduit is not as thick as the aortic leading to fears of root dilation. The incidence of this may depend on:
* surgical technique and surgical skill
* the type of lesion ( an originally regurgitant - leaky - valve is more likely to leak after surgery according to some results )
* the presence of prior tissue abnormalities that lead to post-op root dilation - this abnormality seems to occur in a fraction of people with a congenital bicuspid aortic valve.
So some things to discuss with your surgeon would be the technique in particular try to find out what he will do to minimize the risk of root dilation post op. If you are comfortable with his answer and his assessment of the risk the Ross might be the best solution for you.
All the best with your surgery, please keep the forum posted -- everyone here will be pulling for you for successful surgery and a quick, uneventful recovery.
Best Regards,
Burair.