Bengaluru doctors perform rare heart surgery

Jim (58), from California, was on a business trip to India. On reaching Bengaluru, the fever that had subsided before his travel flared up again and he was brought to a private hospital in Sarjapura road. He was diagnosed with aortic valve disease.

Jim had been aware of his condition but never affected by it. In fact, he had participated in a marathon just a month ago.

Dr Joseph Xavier, the chief cardiac surgeon, Columbia Asia Hospital, Sarjapura Road performed the complicated surgery. “Due to significant aortic valve incompetence, blood that was being pumped out of the heart was flowing back into it, putting it under severe strain. Blood culture reports indicated that bacteria had already started developing in the blood. There was a fluid collection in his lungs and the other organs weren’t receiving getting enough blood, resulting in gradual failure of the kidneys and liver,” explained Dr Xavier.

The doctors found that the infection was destroying the valve and the heart muscles and the antibiotics would not clear the infection unless the source within the heart was removed.

Dr Xavier said, “This meant an open heart surgery to replace the infected and destroyed valve and its surrounding tissue. This was a tough call for the cardiac surgical team. If they waited to see whether the antibiotics worked, the kidney and liver failure would worsen making the post-surgery recovery difficult. But there was a good chance that after the operation, the replaced valve could get infected.”

However, the chief cardiac surgeon felt it’s better to ward of the post-operative organ failure and take a chance with a recurrence of infection. The decision paid off, Jim had a successful operation.

Dr Xavier added, “It was a difficult decision to operate on active infection of the heart valve as the tissue inside was in a state like butter, and it is very difficult to fix the valve in such cases. Also, the possibility of the implanted valve getting infected is very high in such a situation. The failing organs like kidney and liver because of the bloodstream infection were an added risk. Fortunately, after the operation, the patient recovered quickly and went home on the 12th day.”

  • Related Posts

    Yashoda Medicity’s AI-enabled E- ICU poised to make Quality Critical Care Universal

    Super Specialty Hospital hosts discussion with GE Leaders to expand reach Delhi/NCR: A mother’s compassion knows no bounds. Bearing the name of an iconic mother, Yashoda Medicity also wants to…

    World Record in Robotic Tele-Surgery takes Intercontinental Leap of 20,000 Km

    SSiMantra, ‘Made in India’ Surgical robot, flourishes another Eye Popping feather in its Cap New Delhi: It seems SSInnovations, maker of surgical robot SSiMantra, knows no bounds in scripting world…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Yashoda Medicity’s AI-enabled E- ICU poised to make Quality Critical Care Universal

    Yashoda Medicity’s AI-enabled E- ICU poised to make Quality Critical Care Universal

    Licences no shield in NDPS cases: HC refuses bail in 1.37 crore tablets seizure

    Licences no shield in NDPS cases: HC refuses bail in 1.37 crore tablets seizure

    No cough syrups without a doctor’s prescription – New rules announced

    No cough syrups without a doctor’s prescription – New rules announced

    CSIR-IIIM launches two-month certificate course On cGMP-compliant herbal drug manufacturing

    CSIR-IIIM launches two-month certificate course On cGMP-compliant herbal drug manufacturing

    Two nurses at AIIMS Bhopal booked for giving wrong injection to child cancer patient that caused his death

    Two nurses at AIIMS Bhopal booked for giving wrong injection to child cancer patient that caused his death

    Telangana DCA unearths Rs 70.56-lakh excipient label-tampering scam

    Telangana DCA unearths Rs 70.56-lakh excipient label-tampering scam