T in YVR
Well-known member
A couple days ago we had a tragic event occur in our office where I work. A woman (around age 50) had what turned out to be a fatal stoke. Found unconscious, (probably had been so for about 10 min), rushed to emergency, remained in a coma for 1 week in ICU, and very sadly passed away the other day. It obviously hit alot of people very hard and is tragic when this kind of thing happens.
It got me to thinking/reflecting (as I turn 50 this year) - *generally* speaking (since everyone is unique in their own situation), is the likelihood of a stroke actually much less in many of us - esp. those with mechanical valves - who have had AVR than it is for the general population? I mean, many of us have mechanical valves, are on warfarin and monitor our INR very regularly (I home test weekly) - and our INR range is obviously higher than the general public (2-3 or 2.5-3.5 vs. ~1.0), to help prevent clots from forming in and around our valve. But this higher INR level should reduce the likelihood of clots forming anywhere in our bodies. Right? With many people in the general public, they have no idea what their INR is, and less likelihood of knowing if a potentially fatal problem lurks unless you are very proactive about your own health, get regular blood work and check ups etc - and even that can only tell you part of the picture.
Anyways, I was just curious about people's perspectives on this....this sad event got me to thinking about life and the likelihood of strokes etc. So many variable at play I guess (smoking, diet etc), but all things being equal, I have to think that an AVR patient has some reduced risks due to the monitoring and warfarin (generally if mechanical), and even the recommended emphasis on a healthy lifestyle and diet as a result of open heart surgery/AVR.
Thxs,
Tony
It got me to thinking/reflecting (as I turn 50 this year) - *generally* speaking (since everyone is unique in their own situation), is the likelihood of a stroke actually much less in many of us - esp. those with mechanical valves - who have had AVR than it is for the general population? I mean, many of us have mechanical valves, are on warfarin and monitor our INR very regularly (I home test weekly) - and our INR range is obviously higher than the general public (2-3 or 2.5-3.5 vs. ~1.0), to help prevent clots from forming in and around our valve. But this higher INR level should reduce the likelihood of clots forming anywhere in our bodies. Right? With many people in the general public, they have no idea what their INR is, and less likelihood of knowing if a potentially fatal problem lurks unless you are very proactive about your own health, get regular blood work and check ups etc - and even that can only tell you part of the picture.
Anyways, I was just curious about people's perspectives on this....this sad event got me to thinking about life and the likelihood of strokes etc. So many variable at play I guess (smoking, diet etc), but all things being equal, I have to think that an AVR patient has some reduced risks due to the monitoring and warfarin (generally if mechanical), and even the recommended emphasis on a healthy lifestyle and diet as a result of open heart surgery/AVR.
Thxs,
Tony