Some interesting rough statistics and observations from this thread. I viewed the public profiles and this is what I found:
Of the 10 members who indicated they hear/feel heart thumping, including myself
All 10 took a mechanical valve
9 can be confirmed to have had a bicuspid aortic valve replaced with a mechanical valve
Most noted they had a Dacron conduit included
Some obervations can be made from this data:
Most, if not all are likely under 65, since all have chosen a mechanical valve. Those who posted age information support this.
Most if not all had a leaky aortic valve, again confimred by those indicated this and typical of a dialating BAV and aorta.
From this one can surmize that the hearts of the 10 were all strong prior to BAVR. and also are still after BAVR. What I've been told and believe I also read, is that the heart will pump with a much greater conraction to compensate for the inefficiency of a leaky BAV. This in part contributes to the dialation at the ascending aorta due to the high pressures at that point. It also requires the entire arterial system to become compliant because it must deal with a large swing between diastolic and systolic pressure.
The arteries and the large aorta are not supposed to be like solid tubes. If this occures it may be a form of hardening of the arteries which can develope with age and for many other reasons.
If you can imagine, just after the systolic loading from a strong pump of a former BAV heart (remember it compensated for inefficiency all those years), the arteries (miles of them) should become gently systolic during the diastolic phase of the heart. This is the point at which there is back pressure on the AV and it closes. As arteries stiffen with age, the systolic pressure from the arteries could cause the thump we feel and sound we hear. The man-made Dacron, which has little compliance, likely helps to broadcast the whole story.
Somethings to consider. Like myself, I would venture to guess that many of us were also on Zestril for hypertension prior to the surgery, some may still be on it. Zestril helps to relax the fine muscles in the arteries. The down side is that it also helps to relax the heart tissue around leaky valves like the aorta and mitral. So there seems to be a trade off with this med. Top this off with correlation studies being made between BAV and relationship with abnormal arterial cells, you can then appreciate the importance of understanding artierial health for someone who has/had a BAV.
If you are interested in the importance of your arteries and the affects of atherosclerosis, I found these sites usefull:
http://www.vascular.co.nz/hardening_of_the_arteries.htm#What is hardening of the arteries
http://www.emedicinehealth.com/hardening_of_the_arteries/article_em.htm
So what is the moral of the story ?
Excersize, LOTS and LOTS of cardio excersize. Excersize will help the BAV heart recover from the hard systolic contraction it developed during rest to compensate for the leaky BAV. It will also help maintian the health of the arterial system. BAV patients need both. I would venture, the heart will grow quieter with excersize and time. PS, even if you were an athlete before, because leaky compensation might have had to deal with the demands of larger mucles at the tiime.
I'm goinng out to get mine now!
Vincent (54)
BAVR with 27mm ON-X NYP Weill Cornell Dec 19, 2008.
PS. I am not a medical professional or a doctor. My comments in this forum are my own opinion and are not intended to be given as medical or professional advise or a recommendation of any valve choice. Decisions that affect your health and wellbeing are ultimately yours and your doctors. vprnet