CHF and 91

Posted by tadueo @tadueo, Apr 13 4:13pm

My card says the op to replace my leaky Mitral valve is too dangerous for me. Any "elderly" like me had the op? and around to tell me about it?
I'm tired of flipping diuretics and "needle aspirations" to stay alive.
Is it really better than the alternative?

tadueo

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I am 83 and with CHF plus a leaky mitral valve. (small leak, they say.) My doctors will not go in to repair it because of my age and the potential consequences to my mental function. I can buy that... I remember my mom and how she insisted on heart surgery in her 80s, and they had to go back in and replace an artery while still in post-op. She was never the same but lived several more years, requiring constant supervision by family.

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Thanks @dickey. I hear you.

tadueo

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Hi and Im not in my 90's yet and probably a youngster at 65. But just want to share a perspective of what Quality of Life is. I remember prior to my Heart transplant I was on diuretics also and depending on my weight just like your chart it was a daily decision to take the additional pill or not. I had CHF and my EF hovered in the 40's so fluid retention was a daily battle. Add to that my heart arrythmias and being shocked by my pacemaker I was getting tired of it all.

Just a couple of years before the discussion turned to Heart transplant, I had a really bads episode. I was shocked a total of 8 times before they got enough medication in me to slow them down. During that time I was praying to God to just take me home. The stress of it all was really getting to me. I was only 56 at the time and still had children in Highschool.
Well long story short I made it thru that period but was still dealing with the weak heart. In my case I was ready to call it quits when the Heart transplant came up. I continued to get worse and 6 years ago is when my doctor who was out of ideas sent me to be evaluated. The reason Im telling this story is I had decided at that point if I died on the table oh well Here, I come Lord. I had come to a point that unless things changed, I preferred to set up a DNR rather than live that way. So its always a decision as to what you like your life to look like and it a decision, we all have to make at some point, I guess.

I hope that you are able to decide what will be best for you.

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Thank you for your comments, @danab. I really appreciate them.
I haven't made the final decision as yet but the professional's all agree that at my age I'd be lucky to come out of the anesthetic. Maybe I'm pushing the envelope being a veteran of the Korean conflict and a few local wars
with my wife and all the friends I grew up with already passed and not a lot of people see 90.
I have to say I was impressed by my card telling me that I was the "healthiest of all his patients in my age group".
Although that was a surprise when you consider that I have CHF, A-fib, skin cancer (10 ops.), pulmonary edema, etc., etc., etc.
I would miss my children and grandchildren. (They vote nay on my having the heart op.)
(Interesting results from a major clinical study: Of those having CHF 26% are dead after 19 months, 50% after 5
years and 67% after 10 years.)
I'll be 101 in 10 years.
Back to my canvas.
tadueo

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Best to you. I tell my heart everyday, you are a good heart and you are doing a good job for me. Keep it up old gal we have good to do yet in this world.

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You've got the right attitude!

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