@mijostyn , the actual valve is designed like a stent, collapsed until in location. Then it's 'deployed', expanding and pushing the aortic valves' 'petals' open and taking over the process. The most annoying part of the whole surgery/recovery was waking with the breathing appliance still in my mouth & throat.
Which was dry, so the damn thing was 'stuck' to the walls of its' location....
Although 'still in the dark' of anesthesia, I was able to point at the device and register my annoyance...
"Oh, he's back with us....we'll have that out in a moment, 'K?"
I think my response got 'interpreted' properly...."Now would be great..."
I think they kept me for an extra day or 2 because I was a 'refreshing change' in the cancer ward they had room for me in. Most left it covered up entirely...
...and I'm the noise at the end of the hall with a laptop playing Spotify and teasing the aides, RNs', and the parade of specialists and MDs'.
Since I was considered 'young' to receive TAVR (new at the time), I was 'interesting' and considered 'novel'....
...must have been my 'choice of music'...;)
Follow-up surgery for the pacer/defib entailed a nice young lady asking if I'd like to be a part of a study of the Boston Scientific unit, limited to 500 people in the U.S.
100 cardiologists nationwide with 5 patients each, to study the effectiveness of their new device. The pacer makes 'tiny adjustments' if it registers inconsistencies....the defib likewise will make a more subtle approach to 'kick-start', as opposed to the 'donkey-kick' to the chest....
I like the concept of subtle.... *G*
I live with a bedside device that looks like an early network box. It has a cell dongle that's in com 24/7/52 with BS, and go in for a 15 min. IRL system check 2x/yr.
They don't advise as to how I'm doing, other than I've not had to be defib'ed up to now...
So I'm partially Borg with onboard Bluetooth. It is a bit weird to see ones' readouts on a laptop 10' away without the usual wiring and sensors applied.