← Return to Early surgery: Can I get aortic aneurysm repair before it's 5.0?

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@dwander501

Hello, I’m in the beginning stages of my research and not well versed enough to tell you much detail yet. There are several facilities performing these less invasive procedures and I just started googling them, watching videos , and reading articles. I’m pretty sure this will be mainstream soon. The risks appear to be the same as full open heart surgery , but drastically less recovery time. If there’s complications during surgery, they procedure is to open the chest anyway. Not everyone is a prime candidate though. I’m hoping to schedule an appointment with a Cardiologist here at Mayo in Rochester soon to see if I’m a candidate. I feel like I’ve got an opportunity to live longer because had it not been for my decision to get a ct scan due to my neighbor’s passing, my aneurysm would have burst in 2-3 years. It’s a silent killer. I was drinking about 120 Oz of either Diet Pepsi or Rock star daily and eating as if I was invincible. That’s all changed. Good luck to you!
Darren

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Replies to "Hello, I’m in the beginning stages of my research and not well versed enough to tell..."

I'm in the same situation. After 2 friends died, I had a CT scan on my own dime and they found 4.3cm ascending aortic aneurysm. The surgeon also told me the risk ratio was against surgery now. He added a Beta blocker to my existing BP medication and said no heavy lifting, no more heavy weight lifting workouts, etc. I hate the idea of this ticking time bomb in my chest, but am just beginning to research options besides annual CT and echo while waiting for it get bigger. I absolutely don't want to need surgery in 20 years when I'm 80. I just came across an alternative weight lifting called the one hundred that sounds safer, but is going to take a lot to adjust to. Let me know if you come across anything interesting.