First time poster here. I did already search and read several threads related to those with aortic aneurysms. On a short list of reasons to not train
I'm a 43 year old male, 6'2", 190-195lbs, thinner frame (graduated high school at 155lbs). Started working out in my early 20s, lifting at a gym, never too heavy, almost exclusively upper body. All the stereotypical bull crap lifts one may do for vanity. Weighed about 180-195 during those years. Then during COVID, discovered Starting Strength from a friend and fell in love with heavy lifting. I never got that strong, 1 rep squat of 330, DL of 350, bench 250ish.. got up to 204lbs at one point. Past 2 years or so, was more in a maintain mode with slightly less weight. But always consistently worked out 3x a week. Never been a cardio/aerobic guy.
I proactively got a Coronary CT Scan in September of 2023 to see if I had any calcium... thankfully that came up 0. It did show that my ascending aorta was 4.0cm and labeled as ectasia (dilated). In June of '24, I proactively did a Prenuvo full body MRI, and it measured at 4.4. That rate of growth in 9 months would be very alarming. I went to an Aortic clinic at Stanford, and they looked at my MRI and said it was measured wrong and was really about 4cm. A follow up echocardiogram showed 3.9. So thankfully it has not grown in 9 months which is great news. I was freaked out for a bit.
I have a 10ish year history of slightly elevated blood pressure, 130-135 range, as well as slightly elevated LDL in the 110-120 range. I'm now on a low dose BP med as well as Lipitor (different doctors had differing opinions on whether this was necessary). General medical guidance for this is to prevent it from growing, and therefore keep your BP low. That also came with new guidance for how I work out. Their recommendation is anything that I can do 20 reps of is okay. As is aerobic/cardio (running) as those have more gradual BP increases. For weightlifting, they say no straining/grunting, and specifically said no Valsalva! Make sure I can breathe fine the whole time.
Quite often these things are genetic. I'm awaiting test results, but the doctors don't suspect I have any of the tissue disorders. My doctors are legit, and they say there is no way to know for sure what caused this outside of a potential genetic component. Maybe the elevated BP and lifting could have contributed. I've been down the rabbit hole researching this topic. There are studies that show a higher % of NFL players have larger ascending aortas compared to similarly sized control groups. Similar studies with endurance athletes. An aortic doctor at Yale measured BP during heavy lifting, and it can get up to 380. The immediate pressure during the Valsalva is tremendous, so if someone has a weakened aorta for whatever reason, it makes sense to avoid that BP spike... because no one wants to die with a barbell on their back when their aorta dissects!
Thankfully mine is not labeled an "aneurysm." That happens if it grows fast or gets 1.5x the normal size... and being a bit taller, I have a bit more leeway. My plan is to adapt my life to keep it from growing, but also hope to find the right balance to weightlift. I've started doing 3x20 sets of much lighter weight and measuring my BP right after. Obviously can't get the reading right at the bottom of a squat, but with only 65lbs on my back, I'm not coming close to straining. Just a bit of the high rep burn.
Curious if anyone has experience lifting in this capacity. In theory, could I add weight and get stronger with a 3x20 routine similar to a 3x5? But not allowing myself to strain/grunt/hold my breath? Anyone work with any cardiovascular athletic trainers in this area? I recognize this is a forum and not medical advice... just curious if anyone is in a similar situation as I am.