Mild aortic stenosis generally does not affect life expectancy, and patients with moderate to severe stenosis can survive for a long time with timely treatment. Some patients may have life-threatening conditions, but there are no specific survival time statistics, and it depends on the patient’s physical condition and the level of treatment.
Patients with mild aortic stenosis often have no clinical symptoms or hemodynamic changes, and are often only found during physical examinations, a condition that generally does not affect life expectancy.
For patients with moderate-to-severe aortic stenosis, survival is also affected by a number of factors. If the patient is detected in time and treated well in the absence of serious complications, he or she can survive for a long time.
However, if symptoms such as chest tightness, shortness of breath, dyspnea, or even precordial pain and fainting occur repeatedly, then it will have more or less an impact on the length of survival, which suggests the need to actively seek medical treatment in order to prolong survival.