123 Days After Heart Valve Surgery, Justin Runs a Marathon!

Written By: Adam Pick, Patient Advocate, Author & Website Founder
Published: March 20, 2025

I’ve said it before and I look forward to saying it again… The patient success stories from the courageous members in our community are downright extraordinary.

This time, I am happy to share the story of Justin Chamblee, a heart valve patient from Georgia.

 

Marathon Runner After Aortic Valve Replacement Surgery
 

Justin’s Extraordinary Story…

In his own words, here is what happened…

I was diagnosed with a bicuspid aortic valve in my mid-20s, with the recommendation to monitor it every several of years. I would routinely have echos and CT scans every two-to-three years with no new news…just continue monitoring. In 2021, I had it looked at and the measurements of my ascending aorta were increasing, but not to the point of surgical intervention. The cardiologist told me that I will likely have to deal with this at some point, but most likely 10-20 years in the future.

Last year (2024), I started having some symptoms that I thought could be stress, but could also be tied to my heart condition. Random shortness of breath, tiredness, dizziness, etc. I went to see a new cardiologist (my prior one retired) who wanted the normal work-up, including an echo. I knew that my journey was taking a turn when during the echo (which was supposed to be a stress echo), my measurements and level of aortic regurgitation was such that they would not put me on the treadmill!

 

Patient Pretend Running After Heart Valve Surgery

 

This led to being referred to a cardiothoracic surgeon I had seen previously, Dr. J. Alan Wolfe at Northside Hospital Heart Institute in Atlanta, GA. Dr. Wolfe wanted me to get a CT scan and then a diagnostic cath. I had never had a diagnostic cath before. The CT scan did not provide any new insights, but the diagnostic cath changed the trajectory of my life.

I am an avid runner and made my way into the NYC Marathon for 2024. I completed my last 20 mile training run for the race on October 6 and then had my diagnostic cath on October 8. My mmHg was off the charts, measuring >62 mmHg (>40 mmHg is considered Severe). The cardiologist “shut me down”. No more running, etc. until I get this fixed. I generally felt “ok” and therefore was none too pleased, but followed the doctor’s advice.

 

Heart Surgery Patient with Sternotomy Incision

 

On October 30, I went in for surgery to replace my aortic valve (I went mechanical) and a large chunk of my ascending aorta. I cannot say enough about Dr. Wolfe and the team at Northside…great experience and results. Unfortunately, I watched the NYC Marathon from my hospital bed! After a four night hospital stay, I was home and on my way to recovery.

I leaned into the recommendation to walk a lot, walking several miles a day. I was cleared to start lite running at around the five week mark and then fully cleared at the six week mark. At that point, I was back at it. It was painful getting back into the groove (beta blockers are not a runner’s friend), but I was determined. After several weeks of feeling pretty strong, I started to have the crazy idea to run the Atlanta Marathon (March 2, 2025). This became my goal and I started increasing my mileage every week. The closer the date, the more I thought “I can do this”.

 

Patient After Running Marathon

 

 

On March 2, 123 days post surgery, I completed the Atlanta Marathon in 3 hours 51 minutes!

It was not my fastest time, but I was not running for time…I was running to show that I could still do this.

It was an emotional experience…tears were shed during those last couple of miles!

I have really enjoyed your newsletter, Adam. I’m hopeful my story helps other patients in our community.

Keep on tickin,
Justin Chamblee


Written by Adam Pick
- Patient & Website Founder

Adam Pick, Heart Valve Patient Advocate

Adam Pick is a heart valve patient and author of The Patient's Guide To Heart Valve Surgery. In 2006, Adam founded HeartValveSurgery.com to educate and empower patients. This award-winning website has helped over 10 million people fight heart valve disease. Adam has been featured by the American Heart Association and Medical News Today.

Adam Pick is a heart valve patient and author of The Patient's Guide To Heart Valve Surgery. In 2006, Adam founded HeartValveSurgery.com to educate and empower patients. This award-winning website has helped over 10 million people fight heart valve disease. Adam has been featured by the American Heart Association and Medical News Today.

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