← Return to Aortic Aneurysms – Introduce yourself & meet others

Discussion
Comment receiving replies
Profile picture for teresalee @teresalee

Hi, my name is Teresa and I am actually from Australia. Whenever I need to know anything medical I always look up Mayo clinic.
Around 8 years ago I went to the doctor with chest pain, shortness of breath, after a few tests I was diagnosed with bicuspid valve with mild stenosis. I started seeing my cardiologist every 2 years and just before Christmas this year I went for my usual stress test etc and had an abnormal test so had a ct scan, I followed up with my cardiologist a week later and he told me that my aorta was much bigger and he was referring me to a surgeon. I was confused and felt that any question would sound dumb (I thought I should have known what a large aorta meant) that’s when I asked the question on google and the Mayo clinic gave me the answer, I had an aortic aneurysm. so the surgeon called and got me in within a week. This stressed me, he explained to me that I had a 47mm thoracic aortic aneurysm and that he would have to keep a close eye on me. So I am scheduled to have a follow up ct in November 2026. The growth of my aneurysm I was told is faster than normal as it went from 44mm to 47mm in 2 years.
I feel like I have not been well informed because the first time I heard someone tell me I had an aneurysm was just a couple of months ago and I didn’t and still don’t know what questions to ask or what to do with this shock information. I have been very stressed about it.

Jump to this post


Replies to "Hi, my name is Teresa and I am actually from Australia. Whenever I need to know..."

@teresalee Hi Teresa, it is normal to feel stressed by this whole situation, every one in this forum has gone through the same feelings. The good news is that you found you have an aneurysm before it became an emergency, there are plenty of stories of people that have dissected and had to have emergency surgery in this forum and those are the few that survived.

You can monitor and plan, you seem to have the right care, a surgeon who is following you periodically and a cardiologist. At 4.7 cm your aneurysm is on the large side and seems to be growing so surgery is probably more a when than an if.

Take care of your body, keep yourself active, stay in shape without straining too much, avoid lifting that would cause you to hold your breath as BP spikes significantly during those moments. BP is the most critical element to control, your cardiologist should be helping you ensure you maintain it within your normal limits, high BP is the worst enemy of aneurysms even for short periods. Lastly try to keep calm (stress doesn’t help BP) you are doing everything right,, find activities that bring you joy and help you relax.

I had a 5.2 cm aneurysm repaired and also a bicuspid valve. The valve was left in place as it was highly functional, I get it monitored every year and at some point it will need replacement. In your case with symptoms of the stenosis already is likely they will replace it at the time of the repair.

The risks are highly related to your general physical health and whether you have other health issues. I was in very good shape and the surgery went as smooth as it could have gone, it is tough but I was out of the hospital in 5 days back to work in 3 weeks. Everyone different though.

Take care and stay calm (easier said I know) you are doing the right things.

All the best