Pellicle, what I have done is present actual studies and articles featuring actual data on the observed longevity of AVR patients. Some of you have raised some important points, like looking at the age of the patients, or comparing their projected lifespans with those of people who have not needed AVR. And I've found other studies that do those things, and they all seem to be saying the same bleak thing.
I get that it's possible to misread the data, but if that is the case here, then actually telling me how I am misreading the data is much more useful than giving me an airy line about "look at a circle or triangle a different way and it's a cone!" You're saying that I'm misreading the data -- OK, how am I doing that? Or is that just something that people would like to believe?
I'd like to believe that I've got a normal lifespan ahead of me too! But I'd rather get the facts and make realistic assessments about my future than try to blow a rainbow up my butt. If I'm not likely to see my seventies, that sucks, but let me have that information instead of handing me a rosy illusion (which I believe my primary doc has tried to do).
I've seen articles and such online insinuating that AVR patients have normal lifespans, and all of them -- without exception -- either lack actual data or use weasel words like "comparable to a normal lifespan" or "approaches a normal lifespan". I can COMPARE myself to Michael Jordan by pointing out that we're both humans without ovarian cancer, but that doesn't mean that I'm Black, tall, or good at basketball. I can take two steps to the left and rightly claim that I have APPROACHED New York City -- doesn't mean I'm anywhere near the place.
If it's true that AVR survivors have normal lifespans, then there must be some studies revealing that information. Anyone here know of any? Anyone? Because I've found study after study and article after article indicating the opposite. If I'm wrong, there must be SOME data out there contradicting what I've found.
I can see why people might get riled up about this, because many people don't want to see the reality of their own impending deaths. And I can see -- concretely -- that at least SOME people here have made it 30, 40 years after AVR, which is great for them and great for me (because there is the possibility of a normal lifespan for me). On the other hand, if -- as you insinuate -- it's required for an AVR patient to become a health nut and engage in rigorous training in order to have a hope of living a normal lifespan -- remember that MOST people do NOT have to do that in order to make it to their eighties! Insinuating that rigorous training is needed for an AVR patient to make it to their seventies and eighties is a tacit admission that AVR patients have significantly reduced lifespans.
As I have shown:
http://www.acc.org/latest-in-cardiol...-young-patient
"Aortic stenosis, its cardiac sequalae, and its treatment all result in reduced life expectancy, regardless of therapy. The life expectancy after valve replacement varies with age, but life-table analyses of large datasets suggest the average life-expectancy of a 60 year old after aortic valve replacement is about 12 years."
Wish it were not so, but wishing won't make it so.