am I exercising too much with a 4.3 ascending aortic aneurysm?
I am a 60 year old female, who has been very active her whole life. I was a very competitive gymnast, then moved to triathlons, then to cycling and running, strength training has always supported these activities. I am a certified personal trainer, and the aneurysm is a new diagnosis as of Dec of 2022. it was shocking - I now have a heart condition. I ran a marathon 2 weeks after I turned 60. My Cradic surgeon has stated that I can train for a 50k (31 miles) race, as well as a 150 mile bike ride. I have a 50 lb lifting weight limit. My BP is low and I am on no medications. My questions are .. is the activity too much? I run 5-6 days a week plus strength training and biking. I have mild chest pain - all of this has been told to my doc. they keep telling me everything is ok - I am just so nervous about all of this - but want to keep doing what I love. Any input will be appreciated.
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@charlanepj Thank you. Yeah. I appreciate the advice. I’ll keep a close eye on it. Thank you.
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1 Reaction@moonboy Thank you for taking the time to comment. I appreciate it. Yeah, I think about it often and monitor my heart rate with my watch. I will try not to let it take the joy out of my life and keep on getting scanned. Thanks again. I really appreciate it.
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2 ReactionsStress management is equally important as diet and exercise in general but especially so for cardiac diseases. I highly recommend daily mindfulness, meditation and yoga especially yin, restorative and slow flow with conscious controlled breath work techniques. An experienced yoga instructor can be very helpful guiding the practice. 🧘🏻♀️
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1 Reaction@shiloh376 I’m very close to you in age and level of physical activity. I have heard that you should avoid lifting over 40 pounds and any exercise where you’re holding your breath. My aneurysm has reminded stable at 4 cm since detected about 5 years ago.
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1 Reaction@houston13
This was very very helpful!!!! Thank you Houston13!
I am like the original writter, Kmailloux and I always appreciate everyone’s comments like moonboy’s.
The only thing I’d like to add that hasn’t been addressed is the size of the person. Tall people having an advantage in that their Ascending aneurysms tend to either grow slower and their likelihood of an early dissection is better.
It is my understanding that at 5 foot one, I am more likely to require the open surgery sooner because of my height.
I’ve also heard that short people like myself may experience rapid expansion of the aneurysm just before surgery is a must.
Have others purpose this?
4.1 cm/Sara
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3 ReactionsI can’t find a way to edit it, but my last sentence should have read: “Have others heard this”?
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1 ReactionI wonder the same thing, I’ve been diagnosed with a 4 cm ascending but also with 2 leaky heart valves, my mitral and tricuspid. I have always been very active but worry about pushing myself. I was told I can continue to exercise but not lift over 15 lbs . I have been noticing I’m a breath holder so trying to focus on breathing. I’m 120 lbs so he said 4 cm is big for my size 🤷🏻♀️
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