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CARDIAC - One Patient’s StoryA New Option
Conventional CABG surgery performed with the aid of a heart-lung bypass machine has been available since the early 1960s. Beating-heart CABG, approved by the FDA in January of 1997, is appropriate for patients with a variety of heart conditions, including coronary artery disease, genetic heart problems, heart disease as a result of diet, lack of exercise or high cholesterol. Beating-heart CABG especially benefits high-risk patients such as women, the elderly and those with additional risk factors such as diabetes. Guthrie cardiothoracic surgeons have offered this new procedure since November 1999, when Dr. Reitknecht felt that the advances in the procedure had improved enough to be safely applicable. The Surgery Rozelle’s quadruple bypass surgery was scheduled for the first week in May. Admitted on a Monday, he underwent the hour and a half surgery, spent a day in the intensive care unit and was discharged on Wednesday. The new equipment used in the procedure allows the surgeon greater access to various parts of the heart, including the reverse side. This enables the surgeon to perform more grafting and repair techniques to more parts of the heart. Explains Dr. Reitknecht, "I now perform almost 100% of my CABG procedures as beating-heart surgeries, and am also doing beating-heart CABG in conjunction with transmyocardial revascularization (TMR), a laser heart surgical procedure that creates new passages for blood to circulate in the heart, circumventing diseased vessels." The Benefits Beating-heart CABG provides significant benefits for patients, including decreased length of hospital stay (two or three days instead of four) and shorter recovery time. Patients who have beating-heart CABG as opposed to on-pump bypass surgery have less blood loss and fewer instances of respiratory distress, kidney failure or post-operative heart attack or stroke. Women also seem to do better with beating-heart CABG because they often come to surgery later and have smaller vessels. Dr. Reitknecht is pleased with patient outcomes to date – no patients have come back for repeat heart catheterization or a second surgery, which are good signs. Rozelle’s daughter Pamela Drix, who accompanied her father to his two-week follow-up appointment, said, "We were impressed with the speed of the surgery and how quickly Dad has bounced back." Rozelle is pleased with the outcome as well, and is eager to get back to his hobbies – volunteering in the community and hunting for mastodon fossils in Montana and the Ithaca area. A member of the Ithaca-area Paleontological Research Institution, Rozelle was able to participate in a whale skeleton excavation sponsored by the group just two weeks after his surgery. Recently named a Senior Volunteer of the Year by the Tompkins County Chamber of Commerce, Rozelle has nothing but praise for the beating-heart CABG procedure. "All this new technology really does impact patient care – the new surgical retractor and the beating-heart surgery made my hospital stay shorter. And as an engineer, I was also interested to see what assessments were needed from all the different specialists in order to manage my medical care. I’d never had major surgery before, and I was very impressed with the hospital." For more information about making an appointment with a cardiac specialist at Guthrie, call toll-free 1-888-4GUTHRIE (1-888-448-8474). |
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