Hi,
I am a 43 year old male with a leaky
aorticAbdominal aortic aneurysm
Aortic aneurysm
Aortic angiography
Aortic arch syndrome
Aortic dissection
Aortic insufficiency
Aortic rupture, chest x-ray
Aortic stenosis
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Thoracic aortic aneurysm valve resulting from
rheumaticRheumatic fever feverAllergic rhinitis
Coccidioidomycosis
Febrile seizures
Fever
Fever blister
Fever blisters and canker sores
Herpes labialis (oral herpes simplex)
Histoplasmosis
Malaria
Rheumatic fever
Scarlet fever when I was 14 years old. My leakage is rated at 3+. Three years ago I was a 1+. At this point my heart is not
enlargedEnlarged adenoids
Enlarged prostate but there is a slight thickening of the heart muscle around my
aorticAbdominal aortic aneurysm
Aortic aneurysm
Aortic angiography
Aortic arch syndrome
Aortic dissection
Aortic insufficiency
Aortic rupture, chest x-ray
Aortic stenosis
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Thoracic aortic aneurysm valve. About every 6 months for the last 1.5 years I have gone through a week-long episode of on again / off again arrhythmia. I notice a general
weaknessWeakness and slight shortness of breath at this time while climbing stairs. Other than this I am pretty much asymptomatic and until now have had no limitations on exercising. I have been running for 10 years and was in the middle of training for my first marathon when I had the last arrhythmia episode this last March. That was when I got checked and during a stress echocardiogram in early May found that my leakage had gotten worse. My cardiologist says that I will need a valve replacement sometime in the next 10 years depending how the valve degeneration progresses.
Is it possible to repair an aortic valve that leaks at this rate? Can you tell if a repair is possible by looking at the echocardiogram results? I would obviously prefer repair over replacement because of the lifelong anti-clotting medication I would have to be on after valve replacement.
Other than my faulty valve, I am in excellent health. If it could be repaired, what sort of limitations would I have? Right now my cardiologist has given me the OK to run and bike at a lower aerobic pace, 120 – 135 BPM. He also, after my pressing, allowed me to lift light weights.
Thank you very much for any possible insight.
Vince
cardiologist or surgeon to decide on repair over
replacement.
Like you, I had a bout of Rheumatic fever that damaged
my AV at age 13. I had it replaced at the Cleveland clinic
8 weeks ago (I'm 57). Annual monitoring in early years then semi-annual in the last two years combined with careful management of physical activity put it off for a good 40 years.
Dr. Toby Cosgrove at CCF, who is one of the best at AV repair, was not in the least optimistic about repairing mine but left open the tiny option till he eye-balled it. It was not reparable being calcified, functionally bicuspid, stenotic and regurgitant.
There are some great slides and videos available if you are interested in viewing what one of these diseased valves look like; you'll understand more clearly than I can explain why
it must be replaced once you see what it looks like.
Rather than take up bandwidth here, if you wish to access other URLs while pondering your eventual surgery, my email is ***@****