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Questions posted in the
Heart Forum have been answered by doctors from The Cleveland Clinic Foundation.
Question Title: Aortic Valve Replacement follow-upForum: The Heart Forum
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I am a healthy, active 39 year old female who had aortic valve replacement in March of 1998 with a St. Jude valve. Generally I have been recovering just great. My stenosis was ruled as hereditary, I have always had a heart murmur, no symptons before surgery. My mother had the same surgery a few years back so I opted to have an echo just to check, because of the murmur. My questions is, after surgery I had a few bouts with limb numbness and black outs accompanied with dizziness. My cardiologist and neurologist increased my coumadin from 5 and 7 mgs to alternating 10 and 12 1/2 mgs. I have felt fine, until today I had a period when my eye sight was very strange, almost like double vision, but my eyes felt like they were locked in place??? and I also was very dizzy?? This had happened a few times after surgery but not since my coumadin was increased. Could there be something wrong with the valve, I have had an echo following and everything was ok. What is going on? My cardiologist just keeps changing my coumadin level. I have two children and a wonderful husband. I do not want to have a stroke or anything. My neurologist had said that these occurances were tiny platelets in my bloodstream and that increased coumadin should remedy this. These symptons seem like mini stroke symptons. Do you have any suggestions??
_______ Dear Lisa, thank you for your question. The symptoms that you describe could indeed be transient ischemic attacks (TIA's) that are also called mini-strokes, or they may be related to something else. If your valve was working fine on the echo, then I doubt there's a large clot on the valve that was causing clots to break off. However, there's a chance that you are having microemboli form on the artificial valve if you haven't been anticoagulated well enough. We measure the effectiveness of coumadin therapy by a blood test called the PT INR. We recommend that the INR stay between 2.5-3.5 for patients with mechanical valves. Everyone responds to coumadin differentlty so it's not unusual to keep readjusting the coumadin dose. If your PT INR has been sufficiently high during these episodes, then other causes would need to be investigated. One suggestion would be to take a daily baby aspirin along with coumadin since the combination of aspirin and coumadin may be better than coumadin alone. However, you need to speak to your cardiologist regarding specific treatment plans. I hope this information is useful. Information provided in the heart forum is for general purposes only. Only your physician can provided specific diagnoses and therapies. Feel free to write back with further questions. Good luck! If you would like to make an appointment at the Cleveland Clinic Heart Center, please call 1-800-CCF-CARE or inquire online by using the Heart Center website at www.ccf.org/heartcenter. The Heart Center website contains a directory of the cardiology staff that can be used to select the physician best suited to address your cardiac problem.
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