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posted by chromas on Sunday March 17 2019, @09:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the switch-to-libre-heart dept.

Tens of Thousands of Heart Patients May Not Need Open-Heart Surgery:

The operation is a daring one: To replace a failing heart valve, cardiologists insert a replacement through a patient’s groin and thread it all the way to the heart, maneuvering it into the site of the old valve.

The procedure, called transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), has been reserved mostly for patients so old and sick they might not survive open-heart surgery. Now, two large clinical trials show that TAVR is just as useful in younger, healthier patients.

It might even be better, offering lower risks of disabling strokes and death, compared to open-heart surgery. Cardiologists say it will likely change the standard of care for most patients with failing aortic valves.

[...]In open-heart surgery, a patient’s ribs are cracked apart and the heart is stopped to insert the new aortic valve.

With TAVR, the only incision is a small hole in the groin where the catheter is inserted. Most patients are sedated, but awake through the procedure, and recovery takes just days, not months, as is often the case following the usual surgery.

The results “shift our thinking from asking who should get TAVR to why should anyone get surgery,” said Dr. Howard Herrmann, director of interventional cardiology at the University of Pennsylvania.

When every sneeze following open-heart surgery feels like the rib cage is going to break open... I'd certainly opt for TAVR!


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 19 2019, @04:46PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 19 2019, @04:46PM (#817016)

    I have had open-heart surgery, though not for a valve replacement.
    The reality is that your rib cage has been broken open. More prescisely the sternum, in a sternotomy. Sneezing vibrates the break line and stresses the wiring holding the sternum back together as it heals. Just a small cough is enough to drive your pain level through the roof. You do anything to try and avoid sneezing. You hold a pillow as tightly to chest as possible and you know the pain you'll experience after the first time. To avoid that is considerably amazing.
    The more amazing part about this is that the heart keeps on beating throughout the procedure. That's beyond amazing into incredible territory.