Post
by Bob S. » July 5th, 2012, 1:11 pm
I had my chest opened for an aortic valve replacement and 3X bypass at the end of July, 2003, shortly before my 79th birthday. I started back on the erg a few weeks after that. I live in a rural area, so I was on my own for planning post-op rehab. My routine included erging, hiking, and going to a local fitness center for treadmill and resistance work. I tried to stick to a routine of one day of each for a three day cycle. By February of 2005, I entered a Crash-B satellite competition and qualified for a free round trip flight to Boston. By the following December, I went to Copenhagen with the USIRT and broke the 80-89 LWT WR. A few weeks later I became the first octogenarian to break 8 minutes in the 2k (7:54.9, which has been thoroughly clobbered by others since then).
So, yes, you can go back to rowing and/or erging with a wired up sternum. The recovery has to be gradual. It takes patience and persistence. I vividly remember feeling as weak as a kitten for that first month after surgery. I started out very carefully and just increased the load a bit at a time - baby steps.
Bob S.