kx250rider
New member
For those who aren't up on my story, I have been lifting for 30 years, and just got diagnosed with a heart condition; bicuspid aortic valve anomaly, and severely calcified aortic valve, accompanied by enlarged aorta and enlarged heart. I was first misdiagnosed as having HCM, but that was disproven in a more comprehensive physical at the Cooper Clinic in Dallas earlier this week.
SO, the bottom line is that I need the aortic valve replaced, and the aortic root replanted (REALLY UNPLEASANT operation; sawing my sternum in half, etc. I will need it done between 10 and 20 years from now (mid-50s to mid-60s). I hope maybe there will be advancements by then, making it less gruesome of a surgery . But knowing the facts, I will be able to continue lifting, but nothing heavy. I've been on 3-5 sets/10 reps at 325 on the bench, and that's no longer allowed. The rule is that I can only do enough weight whereby I can lift (x lbs) for 10 reps and 3 complete sets, without failure, and without "bearing down" or straining. I'm looking at about 175 on that, I hope. Luckily, my routine for pretty much every other lift, was already within the rules on the limits. The lat pulldown and seated row will need adjustment, but not as much as the bench.
Common sense says that if I do a whole bunch of sets of a lot of reps at a lower weight on the bench, I'll lose mass. Any thoughts on this? At my age, if I lose it, it's not coming back. I don't want to lose all I've worked on since I was 14, but I also don't want St. Peter sending me any messages if I over-do it!
My goal is to try to keep what I have, and I'm trying to figure out what routine will do the best on that.
Charles
SO, the bottom line is that I need the aortic valve replaced, and the aortic root replanted (REALLY UNPLEASANT operation; sawing my sternum in half, etc. I will need it done between 10 and 20 years from now (mid-50s to mid-60s). I hope maybe there will be advancements by then, making it less gruesome of a surgery . But knowing the facts, I will be able to continue lifting, but nothing heavy. I've been on 3-5 sets/10 reps at 325 on the bench, and that's no longer allowed. The rule is that I can only do enough weight whereby I can lift (x lbs) for 10 reps and 3 complete sets, without failure, and without "bearing down" or straining. I'm looking at about 175 on that, I hope. Luckily, my routine for pretty much every other lift, was already within the rules on the limits. The lat pulldown and seated row will need adjustment, but not as much as the bench.
Common sense says that if I do a whole bunch of sets of a lot of reps at a lower weight on the bench, I'll lose mass. Any thoughts on this? At my age, if I lose it, it's not coming back. I don't want to lose all I've worked on since I was 14, but I also don't want St. Peter sending me any messages if I over-do it!
My goal is to try to keep what I have, and I'm trying to figure out what routine will do the best on that.
Charles