Hi heart sisters,
I sent an earlier post about my mom surviving her isolated aortic valve replacement surgery last Wednesday.
I had spent much time and effort in an attempt to achieve information so that she could make an informed decision about whether to have the surgery, what to expect, how soon, etc.
So that nobody makes the same mistake as I did, the type of incision really is not a major criteria in navigating through this maze. Perhaps with the full sternum not being cut and spread, she will be able to use her upper body strength sooner to help in the rehab.
I have to admit right now I'm in shock at how much worse my mom's condition has become. She can barely walk. She can't get herself in or out of bed so she won't even be able to go to the bathroom when that time comes.
I guess one could say that she is alive and that should be celebrated but she was asymptomatic before the surgery and now she can barely catch her breath after walking several steps. It is so painful to watch.
At her age, she might not even survive the stress of this and she could develop other fatal conditions like afib and die quickly from that and discount the extra 10 years of life the new valve will give her. They knew about the thickness of her heart wall before the surgery but nobody told us about what else could go wrong with her after surgery or down the line due to the condition her heart was in.
She has a wonderfully working valve but who cares if she is not the person she was and will never be?
They say she will probably get better therapy care from an in house rehab center than using home health care. The case worker told us our Medicare insurance coverage plan doesn't like to reimburse for home health care.
My mom wants us there with her in ICU around the clock. She is afraid that we will leave and the nurses won't take proper care of her. She's had bad hospital experiences in the past. They can't focus on her emotional comfort as much as making sure she doesn't code out. But I'm fearful the stress will push her over the edge. Seeing her so agitated and full of anxiety is enough to push me over the edge with a breakdown.
The next step out of ICU will be a step down unit where the patient/nurse ratio will be much higher. I don't know how we are going to get through this.
Does anyone know of some good criteria to use when evaluating an inpatient cardio rehab center? I feel so unprepared and I know that she will be scared that she won't get better in one of these and will be sent to a nursing home where she will die.
I can barely keep it together right now. I don't like surprises. At least, when I toured the ICU beforehand they warned me that some patients will try to pull out their breathing tube. What they didn't explain is that some people can't swallow with it in and appear to be choking. They can't take the tube out until their breathing gets to a certain state. I could handle them using wrist restraints but I could not handle the tears in her eyes and her begging for it to be removed. I warned her about this and pleaded with her to try to relax during this period but it didn't help.
I feel so alone and lost right now. I'm trying to take care of myself but it is a learning experience on what is adrenaline energy vs. rested energy.
Please pray for us. I will be journaling every detail of what has happened to her so that other families can get a forthright picture of what is more likely to happen after surgery in an older person. Nobody is alike and some people will recover more quickly than others but families as well as the patient need to be prepared for the worst.
During this process, I missed an important date to reinstate my mortgage loan and lost my house. The third party buyer will let me buy it back at a 25K profit. I don't have redemption rights. I will be depleting most of my 401K to do this. I don't even have time to see if I would qualify for a loan having been foreclosed.
I won't say things couldn't get worse because I know they can.
Weary and feeling overwhelmed,
KK




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