Aortic Aneurysms – Introduce yourself & meet others
Welcome to the Aortic Aneurysms group on Mayo Clinic Connect.
An aortic aneurysm is a bulge in the wall of the aorta. The aorta begins deep in the heart as it emerges from the powerful left ventricle, gently arching over the heart, descending into the chest, and finally into the abdomen. Some aortic aneurysms can be harmless; others can lead to catastrophic problems. I invite you to follow this group and connect with others, share experiences, exchange useful information, and learn about aortic aneurysms.
Get started rby clicking the +FOLLOW icon on the group page here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/aneurysms/
There are some great conversations going on right now that I think you’ll like. Grab a cup of tea, or beverage of your choice, and lets chat. Why not start by introducing yourself?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Aortic Aneurysms Support Group.
Connect
@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
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
3 ReactionsHi Teresa! First, take a breath. What you are feeling is completely understandable, and nothing about your reaction means you missed something or should have known more. You were told pieces of information over time without the full picture being put together for you, and that is disorienting for anyone. You did exactly what a thoughtful patient does. You listened to your doctors, followed up, went to your appointments, and when something didn’t make sense, you went looking for reliable information. Finding Mayo Clinic and learning the word aneurysm on your own is not a failure on your part—it is a gap in communication that happens far too often with aortic patients.
A 47 mm thoracic aortic aneurysm in the setting of a bicuspid valve is something that absolutely deserves close monitoring, and your concern about the growth rate is reasonable. The stress you’re feeling often comes less from the number itself and more from not knowing what it means for your future, your safety, and your day-to-day life. Uncertainty is the hardest part. Your job right now is to REDUCE your stress. Posting here will help with anxiety and most posts get responded to pretty fast. @houston13
Here are the most important things to anchor to right now. Knowledge is power. Stay very close to a major medical center that has a dedicated thoracic aortic specialist department, not just general cardiology. Meet your thoracic surgeon now, not the morning of surgery someday. Even if surgery is not imminent, that relationship matters. You deserve time to ask questions, understand thresholds, and know what the plan is long before decisions become urgent.
You are not behind. You are not late. You are not being dramatic. You are learning about a condition that most people only hear about when something goes wrong, and you are doing it in a controlled, proactive way. For a bit of perspective: I survived an acute Type A aortic dissection in 2015 and emergency open-heart surgery. I learned the hard way how critical it is to understand your aorta, your numbers, and your care team before a crisis. The fact that you know now means you have power, options, and time.
You are doing the right things. Keep learning, keep asking, and make sure you are surrounded by specialists who do this every day. You're going to be fine. Peace.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
3 Reactions@houston13 thank you for the advice. these are things I did not know. I was only told to lose a little more weight ( I am 5 foot 2 and 73kg so do need to lose around 20kg) and to keep my blood pressure down. Now reading about others experiences makes me feel less alone. I am so grateful I found this group.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@moonboy thank you so much, connecting with others that are going through or who have survived an emergency I feel is already helping me to feel less stress about it.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
3 ReactionsYou're going to be fine. Knowing what you're facing, allows you to plan and to really have good care in place. This is not the kind of surgery you wanna have in an emergency – believe me I know it is really hard to survive when it happens emergently so I'm so thankful that you're here and I'm so thankful that you know that you've got an issue so that you can deal with it. Peace.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 ReactionHello my name is Joan,ihave a 59mmaortic arch aneurysm,it was found five years ago and is now 59mm. The doctors told me my BP must be kept low,anything below 120/80 is a must, I have had. manny tests but unfortunately I am unable to have an operation because of other health issues and I would not survive a 12 hour operation.As you can imagine I get very scared sometimes. I just wonder if anyone else is like me.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 ReactionJoan,
Not in your situation, however, a possible thought for you. As you note, normally repairs in the ascending aorta need to be done using an open heart procedure. Given your situation, I am wondering if you might qualify for the ARISE II national clinical trial that is testing a new ascending aorta stent for patients who would not survive an open procedure. That would be a minimally invasive procedure, rather than an open heart procedure. I know of at least one such surgery at Stanford last year and the Cleveland Clinic I believe has been recruiting eligible patients for the clinical trial at 27 sites around the country. Might be worth discussing with your doctor. See links below.
https://med.stanford.edu/ctsurgery/about-the-department/news/2025/first-endovascular-ascending-aorta-stent-graft-in-western-us.html
https://consultqd.clevelandclinic.org/arise-ii-underway-to-evaluate-ascending-aorta-stent-graft-for-endovascular-repair
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
4 Reactions@pittsburghdad good to know of an option.
@breick hi my name is Dave I just wanted to make a comment on the sternum repair for me and some others I talked to about it the experience was not as bad as I had envisioned it to be. Yes when you cough or the hiccups hold the heart pillow it helps alot, my mind made it worse that it really was. Good Luck Dave
Hi I am a 72 yr old woman joining this group to learn more about TAA’s. New cardiologist indicates 4.2 cm ascending aortic dilation found in a routine screening July 2013 as a TAA. He has recommended no straining and lifting along with healthy diet and walking for exercise. Having just replaced left knee in August, I have been doing lunges and squats I haven’t been able to do for years and now I won’t be able to do these anymore per PT ??