Heart Surgery: Faster Recovery
Reported June 2008
BALTIMORE (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Not only do patients need rest after heart surgery, so do their hearts! Next, a new device that helps weak hearts heal.
J.J. McCarthy is happy to be moved into his new home, but not long ago, breathing problems would have made even unpacking a box difficult. "I started having some shortness of breath and I went in to get it check out," he told Ivanhoe.
McCarthy learned he had a heart problem and needed bypass surgery, but a delicate heart can take a beating during surgery. "We repair a heart in surgery," Bartley Griffith, M.D., a heart surgeon at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, told Ivanhoe. "It's a little bit like we create a bruise and the bruise has to heal in the heart."
Now, to help hearts heal after surgery, cardiac surgeons temporarily implant a new device that helps the heart pump blood, giving it a short-term rest. "It basically can perform the function of two-thirds of the heart, and so we let the heart kind of just hang out and repair itself," Dr. Griffith explains.
The tiny pump fits inside a catheter that is inserted through an artery in the groin leading to the heart. The device then helps pump blood in the left ventricle -- the heart's main pumping chamber. It's designed to support the heart for a week or less after surgery, allowing the heart to recover faster. "I think we can pull more patients through open heart surgery than we ever could before, because we have a powerful tool to assist the heart healing," Dr. Griffith says.
McCarthy needed the pump for just two days after surgery. His heart healed quickly and he was back on his feet. "I think it really shortened my recovery time a lot," McCarthy says. "I was able to get up and around a lot faster."
The heart pump device can pump up to five liters of blood per minute -- about three-quarters of a normal heart's output of seven liters per minute. After the device has done its job, it's removed from the patient.
Click here to Go Inside This Science or contact:
Bill Seiler
Asst. Director of Media Relations
University of Maryland Medical Center
(410) 328-8919
bseiler@umm.edu
|
This Month's TV Reports
Stand Up For Your HealthThe time you sit in your chair could be keeping your body’s fat burning in park! The science of how sitting can lead to diabetes, heart disease and obesity.
Keeping Vaccinations On TrackMore than a quarter of all toddlers in the United States may be under-vaccinated, but a new tool is helping parents keep their kids' vaccines on track.
Space-Age Technology At The DentistRevolutionary science is helping to give people healthier smiles.
Cleaning Infected BloodA new device could clean blood of deadly viruses and may help the 14,000 people infected with HIV every day.
Volcano Warning!Millions of people in the United States live every day with the threat of a volcano close by, but a new website could help warn them both if disaster strikes.
Your Five-Day Forecast: More Than Ever Before!Accurate, timely forecasts are vital to everyday life, but just how critical may surprise you!
Saving Lives When Wildifres BurnNew, computerized weather maps are helping emergency responders save lives when disasters strike!
Bad Weather: Bad DriversEach year, 7,400 people are killed and over 670,000 people are injured in crashes. But not all wrecks are because of driver error.
One Second Heart ScansThe latest generation of CT scanners is here, capturing pictures of whole organs in seconds!
Heart Surgery: Faster RecoveryNot only do patients need rest after heart surgery, so do their hearts! How a new device is helping weak hearts heal.
Scum-Free Fish TankMaintaining a saltwater aquarium can be an expensive hobby, but a group of young engineers have created a revolutionary pump for saltwater aquariums that may help some species thrive in captivity.
Get Set … Go! Matchbox Races!An annual event has middle school students racing to the finish line and is teaching them some engineering skills at the same time.
Prior Reports
|