Hi
while I appreciate your concern, and given what you have said about your own propensities for bleeding, I think its prudent to be cautious about warfarin and anti-coagulation therapy.
I'm not intending to dismiss anything you're saying but asking to get some verification on some serious points you've rasied. Regarding the risk of genaral aneurysm all over the body, I have never heard of these points and indeed have heard the opposite from my surgeon and my cardiologist as well as having heard similar (to my) reports reported here.
Given that you also say "We usually don?t know why an aneurysm bleeds", it makes me wonder if you may have the correlation the wrong way round. For instance "many people who have mental disorders smoke" , but one can not reverse that generalisation and say "If you smoke you are likely to have a mental disorder".
With respect to warfarin, I've never heard or read once yet that it contributes to reducing wall strength of blood vessels, what I have read is that when a bleed happens being on warfarin makes it take longer to stop and may require reversal of the AC therapy to stop it. For instance this journal article explores chronic use of AC
therapy (warfarin) and outcomes for aneurysm
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23591187
Chronic oral anticoagulation does not appear to affect the incidence of endoleak after EVAR, nor does it impact the need for reintervention or degree of sac regression. We feel that warfarin may be safely used in post-EVAR patients. It appears that adverse long-term outcomes are more likely after emergency EVAR and in patients deemed unfit for open surgery.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15683272
After EVAR, anticoagulation appears safe and does not significantly alter mortality, risk for rupture, or the incidence of reintervention. Early endoleaks appear more common in anticoagulated patients, but anticoagulation does not preclude spontaneous endoleak resolution nor does it increase late endoleak rates.
this study seems to find a linkage between aneurysm and warfarin:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0741521410006798
but a quick read shows two points of interest:
During a 7-year period, 127 consecutive patients with infrarenal AAAs who underwent EVAR were monitored for a mean of 2.14 years. The average age at the time of EVAR was 73.8 years.
the cohort of study was small and their average age was 73 years old and they had all had aneurysm recently... To me this would raise questions about the transferrability of their observations to the broader (younger) community.
PJ206;n855086 said:
I had bicuspid valve and ascending aneurysm surgery in August 2012.
... me too ... although I had my bicuspid aorta replaced in 1992 with homograft , then my homograft replaced and a aneurysm cut out in 2011.
Against my clear wishes and my surgeon's clear assurances, he switched me from a tissue valve to a mechanical valve during surgery.
did he ever provide reasons for that?
Seven months later, I had a nosebleed that put me in ICU for four days and required embolization via interventional radiology. (My INR was 2.3 upon admission to the hospital, so poor warfarin management was not the problem.)
it definately sounds like you have a propensity for bleeds, did you have this before?
I'm very sorry to read of all your medical woes with respct to your circulatory system, and while your cautions are good to consider there remains a bulk of evidence to suggest that your situation is not the 'normal' one.
So my point here is not to diminish your situation or dismiss it, but to advise gregjohnsondsm that while he should take into account your experience, that it does not represent the most likely outcome for him.
Greg is (in my non medical view) at about the age where a mechanical or a tissue would be of equal benefit trade off. Were he 30 (instead of 50) I would feel differently. Being 51 and having had now 3 OHS myself I am happy to have a mechanical valve as I don't want more surgery. Gregs and your cases are different to mine in that respect.
Anyway sorry to inject so much here, I hope its beneficial to Greg