Open Heart Surgery Recovery Process
This forum is for questions and support regarding heart issues such as: Angina, Angioplasty, Arrhythmia, Bypass Surgery, Cardiomyopathy, Coronary Artery Disease, Defibrillator, Heart Attack, Heart Disease, High Blood Pressure, Mitral Valve, Pacemaker, PAD, Stenosis, Stress Tests

First, never look back upon an ASD closure with regret. Lots of mounting evidence of more severe consequences in people of all ages who didn't know they had the ASD or elected not to have it closed which is certainly a personal decision (but with measureable risks)with each case being different. We're both just darn lucky that we had some non-fatal warning that we had the ASD. Having said that, recovery can be tough so my heart goes out to you buddy (no pun intended). I had a couple of bouts with pericarditis which slowed things down but have to confess, while the intense recovery phase was only about 4-6 weeks, it was fully a year before I felt fully and consistently human again. Even now 4 years later I have occasional physical/emotional reminders but they are far outweighed by thankfulness to be here and much hope for a great and long future...so in that way the reminders are a good thing.
Congitive impairment (AKA pump head) is controversial and not a welcome topic of discussion for physicians because - and righfully so - the evidence is mixed and complicated by other patient sample issues, and they fear it will dissuade people from necessary open heart surgery. Most of the information is from bypass patients because that is so much more common than ASD closure, but that's OK because it does appear that its being on the "pump" that may cause problems (if any occur) more than the type of surgery. Anyway if you enter "cognitive impairment after heart surgery" into your search engine a few fairly good articles will come up. If you want my opinion, and that's all it is, you should concentrate on physical recovery and not expect too much of yourself too soon. Heart surgery is a tough enough go after which all of us have some down days and feel really disconnected. Just like everytime we forget a person's name or the author of the last book we read isn't a confirmation of Alzheimer's, stressed disconnect after heart surgery isn't necessarily permanant memory loss.
Take care !
Thanks for the info - it is interesting to hear of other people and their experiences with the recovery. I guess I'm pretty lucky ... I went into the hospital on Thursday morning and was discharged the following Monday - I just reached 2 weeks post-op today.
It sounds as if you went through (and I am too) good days and some not-so-good days. I'm pretty positive about the whole thing, so it isn't too tough getting through the bad ones. My biggest complaint right now is getting decent sleep, which I (rightly or wrongly) ascribe to the normal pain/inflammation healing process as well as 'pump head'. I don't think the brain and our other organs like the pump too much but I haven't noticed any cognitive impairment.
As far as my decision making process with the surgery, I don't regret it at all. My "adventure" started late last year and every doctor I spoke to pretty much said "get it fixed" after it was diagnosed. The only things that seemed to be a choice was to have the hole fixed with a device via a catheter, or via the "standard of care" which is the surgery. I opted for the surgery, and it turned out my ASD was one of the rarer ones (a sinus venosus ASD) which also required a pulmonary vein reroute, so a device couldn't have been used.
I was hoping this was just benign PVCs when this all started (and I was reading this forum a lot before I was diagnosed, so I became very knowledgeable about PVCs), but I followed through with the doctors recommendations (including one of my best friend, who is also a surgeon) and went through the EKG, X-ray, echo, cardiac cath processes prior to the surgery.
And yes, on good days, it is easy to do too much too early and be sore and cranky later in the day, so I have to remind myself to take things slowly for the next few weeks.
Thanks for the positive and well written comments.
- ttech
My son (3.7 years old) underwent ICR for ToF in India, today is 15th post-operative day still he is in ITU. He face so many problems after surgery, now he could not breathe properly so that the Doctor advised us the child need one more surgery in his throat so as to breathe properly, three days before throat surgery