4.79 cm - Female Age 59
I am a female that was diagnosed with an aortic aneurysm in 2015. It's grown from 4.2 to 4.79. It grew 2 cm in the past year. I'm starting to experience some chest discomfort from time to time and I'm noticing some belly pain. I've had some mild back pain in my upper back--dont know if it is related. I'm full of anxiety because it sounds like the outcome if grim. Any words that can help are encouraged thank you.
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Thanks for all your help. I joined the Aortic Athletes Group on FB. It's so inspiring. I appreciate the insight. Take good care! ~S
I agree with @mikeneverwired, I had an ascending TAA which was discoved after I broke my leg riding my MTB, I was 54yo (4 years ago). Mine was 5.2 cm , I had surgery 2 months later as I had to wait for the leg to heal a bit from the surgery. Surgery is not pleasant but went completely unventful, out of hospital in 5 days, back to work in 3 weeks (the accident saved my life).
I was (still am) very active, spinning, biking, weights, hot yoga, never smoked, ate healthy and that contributed a lot to the successs of the surgery (surgeon gave me >99% probability of no complications). The main caution my Cardiologist gave me before the surgery was related to weights, but mainly for the reason that has been stated before, when lifting heavy weights we tend to hold our breath and grunt and that causes spikes in BP ( he also mentioned crunches too, we tend to hold our breath when doing abs). Sometime ago I shared a podcast in this forum from Andrew Huberman and Andy Galpin that explains very well the effect on BP from holding your breath, it is online among the Huberman Labs podcasts.
Just think you are one of the lucky ones that finds out they have it and can do something about it. Stay active and keep taking care of your body. Beyond that my main advice is to find a good Cardiologist, one that is an expert in aneurysms, not all of them are. Once you find one, stay on top, ask a lot of questions, mine is incredibly receptive and super helpful. Remember that the 5.0cm reference size is just that a reference, there are other factors, body size, etc that will determine when and if surgery is needed.
Good luck to you and if there any questions I can answer let me know.
I just saw your post. I completely understand. I was diagnosed with an ascending aortic aneurysm May 2023. The diameter was 3.9 to 4.0 depending the test and the reader. It measured 4.1 last fall. Nobody was alarmed.
I lifted and trained pretty intensely prior to my diagnosis. Initially, I was told not to lift anything heavier than 50 pounds. Then I as told not to lift anything heavier than 20 pounds. Aerobic activity had no limits, but no contact sports or anything that involved a quick, forceful torsion motion of the chest - tennis, golf, racquet ball, etc.
After being told the 20 pound limit… and even the 50 pound limit, I wanted more clarification. I went to Cleveland Clinic and spoke with a cardiologist there about activity. We reviewed my normal activity. I told him 50 pounds on some lower body movements is nothing. Yet if I tried to do some upper body lifts with it, it would be very difficult or impossible.
For reference, I was squatting 200 pounds, deadlifting 270 pounds and benching 110 pounds prior to my diagnosis. Basically, doing a stress test on the aneurysm 3 times a week. I am 5’7 and 122 pounds. I do not have issues with hypertension. Resting BP is 100-110/50-60. HR 55-60.
We came to an agreement that using an exertion scale and leaving 2-3 reps in the tank, no breath holding, grunting or bearing down would be permissible. I have been following this now for one year. I see him again this week. My scans will be repeated as well.
I think one thing everyone needs to keep in mind is we are all unique as someone else pointed out. If I had been inactive, struggled to carry groceries and never went to the gym, more stringent lifting limits would apply. I feel comfortable now and can continue to work hard in the gym with limits, continue to see my friends there and maintain my sanity. Exercise is a big stress reliever for me.
Another thing I did unrelated to exercise is I purchased a medic alert bracelet that identifies me as having an ascending aortic aneurysm and a contact number. There are some cute ones out there now. I purchased my through Lauren’s Hope.
Keep your chin up. It takes awhile to wrap your head around this and then you learn to adapt.
Thank you for the post...question, now that you are on the other side of surgery, do you have the same restrictions? How robust is the repair in terms of how much workout stress you can put on your body? No one that I have chatted with has addressed this. Does the repair make you "good as new", or close to it? Thanks of any help you can provide.
Thank you for your very helpful reply! I'm curious, do you live near the Clevland Clinic? I wonder if I must journey to a heart center or use local physicians. I live in the Tampa Bay area of Florida, specifically, St. Petersburg. We have good hospitals here but there is an excellent facility in Miami, Mount Sinai that has an aortic center. Did you establish care close to home or do you travel to see your doctor(s). Sorry for all the basic questions, I am trying to navigate this as best I can. ~S
Thank you! Do most people travel to find a good specialist? I live in St. Pete, FL, and have been referred to a local cardiologist but there is an aortic center in Miami, a roughly five-hour drive, that I could travel to, if need be. The cardiologist I was referred to here specializes in heart failure, that's all I know. I haven't had my appointment with her yet.
I have no restrictions, I’m pretty much at my old workout rhythm except I cannot run mainly because of my leg fracture, and chest exercises do bother a little because of the sternum (never heals to 100% according to my cardiologist). I do have to watch grunting and holding breath while exercising since i still need to watch my BP, my cardiologist says there’s always a change I may develop another one (mainly because I also have a bicuspid aortic valve). I get checked every year.
That's awesome, I'm so happy for you. I wish you much health and happiness. Thank you for your help 🙂
I live in Houston and thankfully we have a huge medical center, my cardiologist and surgeon are top notch, highly recognized and awesome bedside manners, feel lucky to have found them
If it's aurtic aneurysm they don't look into operating until 5.5cm.
Your symptoms may not be anything to do with the aneurysm.