T in YVR
Well-known member
Hi all,
I am new to this board. It's a fantastic support site and very informative. I'm male/46 and was recently diagnosed with a bicuspid aortic valve after a stress test and ultrasound (in early Feb. by an internal medicine dr.). I just saw my cardiologist on March 1 for the first time. He looked at my results which indicated moderate to severe regurgitation, and my left ventricle dilated to 65 mm (LVED) (which I believe is in a range they would call "moderately dilated"). My EF% is 60%, which he said was ok still. My blood pressure and echo results were normal, and I am fairly asymptomatic other than some sporadic chest aches). The Dr. heard my murmur, checked my pulse and said he detected "water hammer pulse". Based on all the data thus far, he suspects I am in the "severe" category and will need aortic valve replacement this year. They have ordered up a CT/Angiogram and TEE for me (dates TBD), and based upon confirmation of his assessment, will line me up to meet a surgeon.
I have somewhat come to grips with my situation, but the waiting is absolutely the worst (for more tests/answers/complete insight into the whole picture). Its likely going to be at least a few weeks for the remaining tests, then another month or two before the surgeon visit, etc. I suspect that once I have all the answers I'll feel better about it all....its difficult not to worry though without the complete picture/true severity. While I wait I thought I would ask a couple questions - if anyone has experience with this, I would be very grateful.
- Is there any way to know if/when you would do permanent damage to your heart (based on how much it enlarges, for how long, other characteristics, etc?). I'm concerned about the left ventricle enlargement and whether it will go back to normal size/operation, as well as how quickly it can change and become more severe. Or is it completely case by case?
- When people experience chest pain and shortness of breath as symptoms, are we talking real noticeable differences from what you may be accustomed to? Right now, I think half the symptoms I sense are between my ears, as I am noticing every little ache, breath, beat etc. My upper left chest seems to have a regular dull ache that doesn't go away.
- I am located in Vancouver, BC. If there is anyone from this area, do you have any surgeon recommendations? I have looked on rateMDs.com, but that's it (I could not find any on this board).
Sorry for the long post - thanks for any help you can offer,
Tony
I am new to this board. It's a fantastic support site and very informative. I'm male/46 and was recently diagnosed with a bicuspid aortic valve after a stress test and ultrasound (in early Feb. by an internal medicine dr.). I just saw my cardiologist on March 1 for the first time. He looked at my results which indicated moderate to severe regurgitation, and my left ventricle dilated to 65 mm (LVED) (which I believe is in a range they would call "moderately dilated"). My EF% is 60%, which he said was ok still. My blood pressure and echo results were normal, and I am fairly asymptomatic other than some sporadic chest aches). The Dr. heard my murmur, checked my pulse and said he detected "water hammer pulse". Based on all the data thus far, he suspects I am in the "severe" category and will need aortic valve replacement this year. They have ordered up a CT/Angiogram and TEE for me (dates TBD), and based upon confirmation of his assessment, will line me up to meet a surgeon.
I have somewhat come to grips with my situation, but the waiting is absolutely the worst (for more tests/answers/complete insight into the whole picture). Its likely going to be at least a few weeks for the remaining tests, then another month or two before the surgeon visit, etc. I suspect that once I have all the answers I'll feel better about it all....its difficult not to worry though without the complete picture/true severity. While I wait I thought I would ask a couple questions - if anyone has experience with this, I would be very grateful.
- Is there any way to know if/when you would do permanent damage to your heart (based on how much it enlarges, for how long, other characteristics, etc?). I'm concerned about the left ventricle enlargement and whether it will go back to normal size/operation, as well as how quickly it can change and become more severe. Or is it completely case by case?
- When people experience chest pain and shortness of breath as symptoms, are we talking real noticeable differences from what you may be accustomed to? Right now, I think half the symptoms I sense are between my ears, as I am noticing every little ache, breath, beat etc. My upper left chest seems to have a regular dull ache that doesn't go away.
- I am located in Vancouver, BC. If there is anyone from this area, do you have any surgeon recommendations? I have looked on rateMDs.com, but that's it (I could not find any on this board).
Sorry for the long post - thanks for any help you can offer,
Tony