Probably not.
If you're now saying your tubes may not have redplated, only you can tell this.
Either you are biased too hot (I consider -42 or -43 volts of bias to be pretty hot, more negative volts is desirable, at least in my book) or a voltage surge came along and whacked your fuse and possibly your caps, or they just failed out of old age.
You're kind of at a multi-decision point. Are your caps bad? Or getting bad?
You kind of have to test these things.
What I would do:
1: Open up the connections from the EL34 cathodes to ground and place 1 ohm 1% resistors in there, 1 for each tube. This enables measurement of tube current, per tube, by reading millivolts on your meter which will equal milliamps of tube current, again, per tube. If you want to bring those measurement points out to an external connector, that's a matter of whether you want to drill a hole or holes in your chassis and how religious you want to get about being able to measure bias easily, from the outside of the amp.
2: I would modify the circuit to allow for a greater range of bias volts. I have much more experience with 6L6 outputs over EL34, but a Twin Reverb usually takes about -52 volts and when I am ready to power up a 6L6-fired amp build for the first time, I very much like to know I have as much as -65 volts on the grids, just so I know the 6L6's are seriously throttled back and cannot go overcurrent. You can do this by inserting a 15K or 22K underneath the bias adjust pot. Or you could change R78 to 1K to 5K. We see that the bias circuit seems to take 1 mil, because R78, a 15K, has -58 volts on one side and -42 volts on its other side. So if 15K drops 16 volts, it's passing 1 mil, close enough. Change that R to a smaller value, every 1K you drop its value adds a [negative] volt to the bias range. If that R loses 10K, you would gain 10 more negative volts of range. That would make me happier, if it were my amp. If I can avoid it, I don't like adjustment pots to be thrown all the way to either end of their adjustment range.