Exercise...
With some family history, I had a routine stress test 2 years ago, then 65. It revealed stenosis at the (bicuspid)aortic valve so that I had an exit velocity of 4.5 m/sec, and a gradient of 85 mmHg. That said, I really never noticed any symptoms. The tests also revealed 'minor dilation' of the aorta just at the start of the arch. Multiple tructural specialists and surgeons all arrived at a consistent 4.9 cm measurement.
Surgeons wanted to open me up and fix the dilation wile installing a valve. Younger structural specialists recommended tavr and monitoring of the artery. I chose the latter. One year checkup was measured at 4.8 cm. Maybe the reduction was just measurement error, but not an adverse trend. I took it easy the first year though.
Now I'm trying to get back to what I enjoy...bicycling. However, I am nervous about causing this thing to grow. I get checked again in August. Just looking for insights. Thanks
To compound the confusion, my BP is pretty hard to control. Vigorous exercise helps.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Aortic Aneurysms Support Group.
@pamela78 So glad you're feeling better about it. It is a shock to the system at first. I am still mourning not being able to work out as vigorously as I used to, but I am grateful that I can move my body, while some people cannot. Life is unpredictable, we have to go with the flow. When you fight reality you suffer...it is what it is! You will be in my prayers, take good care! ~S
Hi charlanepj,
Yours is an unnerving story. What an awful surprise surgery! Did your docs estimate the true size of the aneurysm before it dissected, or the reason for the aortic aneurysm (such as family history, HTN, genetics testing)?
I have a thoracic ascending aorta “dilatation” of only 4.1cm, and I am unsure of its etiology. It was caught on a lung CT about 2 years ago, and was stable at 3.8cm till this past May. At 70 years of age myself, it might be dismissed as a consequence of the aging process. But my elderly father passed away from an aortic dissection post-aortic valve surgery and I myself have several signs of a possible inherited connective tissue disease (just not enough to clinch a definite diagnosis). So I’m contemplating going for genetic testing, as it may affect my children, too…
Question for exercising with ascending aortic aneurysm: Is anyone in this group using a wrist blood pressure cuff to monitor your BP while doing cardio and/or weights, or other activities? If so, how is it working for you? And what kind/brand are you using? How accurate is it? Thanks for any info!