Hi everyone,
I am hoping you can help me select a surgeon and a hospital. I am 43 years old and was diagnosed with MVP and moderate MR in 2011. Last month, my symptoms took a real turn for the worse and I went into heart failure with fluid build up on the longs. I've since had a CT scan, an echo, a TEE, and a heart cath. In a nutshell the mitral valve has worsened and it is time for surgery.
I've been looking at options which started with the Cleveland Clinic, but the more I researched the more I feel like I want to stay close to home for any pre/post surgery follow up. I'd hate to be experiencing some weird symptoms a couple weeks afterwards and having to seek guidance from Cleveland over the phone or email.
My local options in Reading, PA are Dr. Kirk McMurtry at S. Joseph's, or Dr. Christine McCarty at Reading Hospital. I have met with both and each said pretty much the same thing however there were some differences:
Dr. Kirk McMurtry at St. Joseph's:
- he THINKS the valve is repairable based on the imaging - but wont know until he gets in there
- he's done about 150 valve operations, including 75 mitral valve repairs/replacements in the past 24 months. About 20 of those were minimally invasive. He thinks mine looks good for minimally invasive.
- 93% of MV repairs are still intact after 10 years
- I will have to choose mechanical or tissue valve in advance - as he will go ahead with replacement if he gets in there and cannot repair (that's a whole other discussion)
- says I am young and good health, risk factors and minimal, 1% mortality rate, 1% chance of stroke
- he does not use the robot, says he "prefers the tactile feel of standing over the patient and working with his hands"
- to use the robot he says you sit in a corner of the room at a console and manipulate the robot
- both procedures are about the same he says, it's mostly surgeon preference - if you're used to the robot then that's what you do - if not, then you use your hands and instruments, himself, he says he and the robot "do not get along"
- suggested robot might be better for surgeons who do not have steady hands
- uses same team of anesthesiologists and heart/lung machine operators
- their hospital does NOT have dedicated cardiac ICU - it has cardiac, pulmonary and something else I forget
- he can fit me in end of Feb/Early March
Dr. Christine McCarty at Reading Hospital:
- she also thinks my valve is repairable, but will not know until she gets in there. She said she felt about 80% certain that it could be repaired. As with McMurtry she would go ahead with replacement if needed.
- she would plan to do minimally invasive using the daVinci robot
- daVinci robot not a walk in the park however - long discussion about technique, how the heart and lung machine is hooked up - basically they go through your veins for this (groin and neck) for the heart/lung machine. If for any reason the heart and lung machine is not working to their satisfaction (maybe bad veins, kink in veins, I don't know...) they immediately stop with the robot and perform conventional OHS
- same thing even if the heart/lung machine working fine - if for any reason she does not feel like things are going right - stops the procedure and goes full OHS
- says the robot is not quick - anticipate 7-8 hour surgery
- repair could and should last a lifetime, but so far the data is 10-20 years
- we also had the discussion about valve replacement selection - however she differed from Dr. McMurty here saying she could ONLY counsel me to select a mechanical replacement valve as the tissue replacement is really only good for five years. Given my "young" age of 43, she felt it crazy to select a valve that might again need replacement in as little as 5 years. Dr. McMurty provided similar information but clearly left it up to me to select one or the other, whereas with McCarty I got the impression that she would not install a tissue replacement even if I wanted it.
- she says my chance of dying on the table is about 5%. That's up from McMurty's 1%. I am not sure where they get these numbers from, I guess they are both low enough not to be statistically significant
- they do work as a team as well - same anesthesiologists, nurses and heart/lung operators always
- they always have a cardiac physican or PA on staff 24/7 (unlike St. Joseph's which puts their Dr's on call)
- they do NOT have a dedicated cardiac ICU - it's divided into cardiac, disease, trauma.
- they DO have dedicated cardiac nurses
- now for the part that is most concerning for me...her mitral valve experience with the robot. Six operations in total, she just started doing them last fall. Of those six, she had to abandon one and revert to traditional OHS. Now, she's done about 50 of them the conventional OHS way. And with the robot she says she is "very comfortable" having done over 300 heart bypass surgeries with it. So I think her robot experience is excellent, and I think her mitral valve repair experience is also good, but six tries and five successes with the robot, what do you guys think about that? I guess she has to start somewhere, right?
- next step for her is to do a CT scan to look at veins and circulatory system - to help determine whether robot or OHS is warranted
- surgery date would be latter part of February
What do you guys think, are my local options any good or should I be looking elsewhere? Any feedback or comments appreciated!
all the best
Richard
I am hoping you can help me select a surgeon and a hospital. I am 43 years old and was diagnosed with MVP and moderate MR in 2011. Last month, my symptoms took a real turn for the worse and I went into heart failure with fluid build up on the longs. I've since had a CT scan, an echo, a TEE, and a heart cath. In a nutshell the mitral valve has worsened and it is time for surgery.
I've been looking at options which started with the Cleveland Clinic, but the more I researched the more I feel like I want to stay close to home for any pre/post surgery follow up. I'd hate to be experiencing some weird symptoms a couple weeks afterwards and having to seek guidance from Cleveland over the phone or email.
My local options in Reading, PA are Dr. Kirk McMurtry at S. Joseph's, or Dr. Christine McCarty at Reading Hospital. I have met with both and each said pretty much the same thing however there were some differences:
Dr. Kirk McMurtry at St. Joseph's:
- he THINKS the valve is repairable based on the imaging - but wont know until he gets in there
- he's done about 150 valve operations, including 75 mitral valve repairs/replacements in the past 24 months. About 20 of those were minimally invasive. He thinks mine looks good for minimally invasive.
- 93% of MV repairs are still intact after 10 years
- I will have to choose mechanical or tissue valve in advance - as he will go ahead with replacement if he gets in there and cannot repair (that's a whole other discussion)
- says I am young and good health, risk factors and minimal, 1% mortality rate, 1% chance of stroke
- he does not use the robot, says he "prefers the tactile feel of standing over the patient and working with his hands"
- to use the robot he says you sit in a corner of the room at a console and manipulate the robot
- both procedures are about the same he says, it's mostly surgeon preference - if you're used to the robot then that's what you do - if not, then you use your hands and instruments, himself, he says he and the robot "do not get along"
- suggested robot might be better for surgeons who do not have steady hands
- uses same team of anesthesiologists and heart/lung machine operators
- their hospital does NOT have dedicated cardiac ICU - it has cardiac, pulmonary and something else I forget
- he can fit me in end of Feb/Early March
Dr. Christine McCarty at Reading Hospital:
- she also thinks my valve is repairable, but will not know until she gets in there. She said she felt about 80% certain that it could be repaired. As with McMurtry she would go ahead with replacement if needed.
- she would plan to do minimally invasive using the daVinci robot
- daVinci robot not a walk in the park however - long discussion about technique, how the heart and lung machine is hooked up - basically they go through your veins for this (groin and neck) for the heart/lung machine. If for any reason the heart and lung machine is not working to their satisfaction (maybe bad veins, kink in veins, I don't know...) they immediately stop with the robot and perform conventional OHS
- same thing even if the heart/lung machine working fine - if for any reason she does not feel like things are going right - stops the procedure and goes full OHS
- says the robot is not quick - anticipate 7-8 hour surgery
- repair could and should last a lifetime, but so far the data is 10-20 years
- we also had the discussion about valve replacement selection - however she differed from Dr. McMurty here saying she could ONLY counsel me to select a mechanical replacement valve as the tissue replacement is really only good for five years. Given my "young" age of 43, she felt it crazy to select a valve that might again need replacement in as little as 5 years. Dr. McMurty provided similar information but clearly left it up to me to select one or the other, whereas with McCarty I got the impression that she would not install a tissue replacement even if I wanted it.
- she says my chance of dying on the table is about 5%. That's up from McMurty's 1%. I am not sure where they get these numbers from, I guess they are both low enough not to be statistically significant
- they do work as a team as well - same anesthesiologists, nurses and heart/lung operators always
- they always have a cardiac physican or PA on staff 24/7 (unlike St. Joseph's which puts their Dr's on call)
- they do NOT have a dedicated cardiac ICU - it's divided into cardiac, disease, trauma.
- they DO have dedicated cardiac nurses
- now for the part that is most concerning for me...her mitral valve experience with the robot. Six operations in total, she just started doing them last fall. Of those six, she had to abandon one and revert to traditional OHS. Now, she's done about 50 of them the conventional OHS way. And with the robot she says she is "very comfortable" having done over 300 heart bypass surgeries with it. So I think her robot experience is excellent, and I think her mitral valve repair experience is also good, but six tries and five successes with the robot, what do you guys think about that? I guess she has to start somewhere, right?
- next step for her is to do a CT scan to look at veins and circulatory system - to help determine whether robot or OHS is warranted
- surgery date would be latter part of February
What do you guys think, are my local options any good or should I be looking elsewhere? Any feedback or comments appreciated!
all the best
Richard