Preparing for Mitral Valve Repair
If you undergo mitral valve repair, your physician will give you detailed instructions to prepare for surgery.
Mitral valve repair is a major surgery. Plan now for a low-stress recovery to help you focus later on what is most important; your healing.
Consider:
- Prepare a few easy meals to freeze and reheat.
- Stock plenty of healthy, no-prep snacks.
- Arrange for pet care.
- Ask for help from a friend or family member to pick up groceries, drive you around and refill your prescriptions.
You may need to stop taking medications a few weeks before surgery, including medicine that increases your risk of bleeding.
What to Expect During Surgery
Before surgery, you will receive anesthesia so you fall asleep and feel no pain. The surgeon will connect a heart-lung bypass machine to pump your heart and lungs during surgery. Mitral valve repair typically takes two to four hours.
There are a few ways surgeons perform mitral valve repair. Your heart surgeon can make several cuts in your chest to access the heart and repair the mitral valve by reshaping or rebuilding the flaps. In endoscopic surgery, your surgeon makes several tiny cuts in the chest so he or she can use cameras and specialized surgical tools to perform the procedure using minimally invasive techniques. In some cases, surgeons use a robotic system for the surgery, which allows the surgeon to operate as he or she watches a 3D image of the heart on a computer display in the operating room.
New procedures are available that allow a surgeon to insert a metal clip into the mitral valve to reduce mitral valve regurgitation. During this procedure, known as MitraClip™, a catheter is introduced through an artery in the groin. Once at the mitral valve, the surgeon can clip the valve to reduce incorrect blood flow. Ask your cardiologist if you qualify for a MitraClip™ procedure.