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If you are facing heart valve replacement surgery, you are not alone. Each year, more than 700,000 patients globally undergo some type of heart surgery. In fact, you may recognize some of their faces. Barbara Walters, Barbara Bush, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Robin Williams, and Elizabeth Taylor have all had heart valve surgery.
Your heart pumps blood continually to deliver oxygen to every part of your body. The heart is a powerful muscle that keeps the blood moving by pumping it to the lungs, where it picks up oxygen and delivers it to the rest of the body. When the blood returns to the heart, it is pumped back to the lungs to pick up more oxygen.
For this process to work efficiently, the blood must move freely and in only one direction. The heart’s valves open so blood can move forward, and then close to keep it from moving backward.
This process is repeated 5 or 6 billion times during the average lifetime.
The heart has 4 valves. The mitral and tricuspid valves control blood flow between the upper and lower chambers of the heart.
On its way out of the heart to carry oxygen to the rest of the body, blood passes through the pulmonary and aortic valves.
Several things can go wrong with heart valves.
A worn out or damaged heart valve can cause some or all of these symptoms:
Even a relatively insignificant leak in a valve can cause severe symptoms.
After discussing your symptoms and listening to your heart to check for a murmur, the doctor may use a number of different tests to “see” how it is working before diagnosing heart valve disease as the cause of your symptoms.
During typical open chest surgery to repair or replace a heart valve, the surgeon makes one large main incision in the middle of the chest and breastbone to access the heart. A heart-lung machine takes over the job of circulating blood throughout the body during the procedure, because the heart must be still and quiet while the surgeon operates. Many surgeons are now able to offer their patients minimal incision valve surgery as an effective alternative to open chest surgery.
Minimal incision valve surgery does not require a large incision or cutting through the entire breastbone. The surgeon gains access to the heart through one of three smaller, less visible incisions (sometimes called “ports”) that are made between the ribs or a smaller breastbone incision in the groin. The diseased valve can be repaired or replaced through one or more of the ports between the ribs, with the surgeon looking at the heart directly or through a small, tube-shaped camera.
Many studies have demonstrated that minimal incision valve surgery offers patients a number of advantages, including:
Patients who have minimal incision valve surgery typically:
You will undergo medical tests and different imaging exams to determine:
You will be asked to sign a consent to surgery form.
Usually half a day, which includes prep time, actual surgery time of 2 to 4 hours, and prep time for transfer to the Cardiopulmonary Unit (CPU).
The answer depends on many factors, including the approach chosen. However, studies on minimal incision valve surgery suggest a reduced pain level when compared to open chest surgery. Ask your surgeon what you and your family should expect for the type of procedure you will receive.
If you have heart valve replacement surgery, you should expect some scarring. With open chest surgery, you will have a sizeable scar in the middle of the upper chest (6-12 cm). The smaller incisions associated with minimal incision valve surgery (2-6 cm) mean smaller scars, and their locations also make them less noticeable.
If you have undergone a standard sternotomy procedure, you will remain in the hospital for approximately 5 to 7 days after surgery. If you have undergone a minimally invasive or port access procedure, you will remain in the hospital for approximately 3 days after surgery.
Refer to page 9 of your Educational Guide.
The Steri-strips over the chest tube sites need to remain in place for approximately 2 weeks after surgery. The wounds can then be open to air unless there is drainage, in which case the wound should be covered with a dressing.
Minimal incision valve surgery has been associated with a faster recovery and return to normal activity when compared to open chest surgery. Recovery will depend on several different factors, but clinical studies indicate that approximately 50% of patients will return to work and full activity within 4 weeks.
All patients are encouraged to resume normal activities at their own pace. Many patients report a return to normal activities with a few weeks.
You may resume regular bathing habits after the removal of your chest tubes and external pacemaker wires. See page 19 of your Educational Guide.
If you have undergone a standard sternotomy and are no longer taking pain medication, you may resume driving six weeks after surgery. If you have undergone a minimally invasive procedure or port access procedure, you may resume driving after you are no longer taking any pain medication.
For shorter trips less than 2 hours in duration, you must wait at least 2 months after surgery before you can fly, if there are no complications. For longer trips more than 2 hours in duration, you must wait at least 3 months before you can fly, if there are no complications.
Constipation after surgery is most commonly due to pain medication. It is very important to take your stool softeners, walk, and eat your vegetables, especially when taking pain medication for longer durations of time. Refer to page 36 of your Educational Guide.
www.YourHeartValve.com
www.Edwards.com
www.AmericanHeart.org
www.acc.org
www.MendedHearts.org
www.HeartValveSurgeons.com
Dr. Junaid Khan’s page at www.Heart-Valve-Surgery.com
“The Patient’s Guide to Heart Valve Surgery” by Adam Pick