Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Doctor Says Canadian-Led Heart Valve Surgery Details Will 'Blow People's Minds'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2017 12:37 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver cardiologist has presented details of a revolutionary heart valve surgery to thousands of doctors from around the world and says the minimally invasive procedure will "blow people's minds."
     
    Dr. David Wood led a study involving 411 patients who underwent an operation called 3M transcatheter aortic valve replacement for treating aortic heart valve disease, at 13 centres across North America, 11 of them in Canada.
     
    "It's going to change, we think, not just North American, but global practice," Wood said Monday before presenting the study at the annual Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics conference in Denver, where 15,000 attendees had enrolled.
     
    Instead of invasive open heart surgery, which requires general anesthetic, slicing of the sternum, or breastbone, and long hospital stays and recovery time, patients were awake for the 45-minute procedure and walking within a few hours. Eighty per of them went home the next day.
     
    "You had no breathing tube, no catheter in your bladder, you could return to work the next day, you could be driving the next day. These are things that I think the average person can't believe are feasible in 2017," said Wood, who practises at Vancouver General Hospital and St. Paul's Hospital in the same city.
     
    The aortic valve is the most important of four heart valves and leads from the heart to the body, supplying blood to the head, lungs and muscles. It wears out and narrows with age.
     
    The median age of patients in the study was 84, and their symptoms include chest pain and shortness of breath.
     
    "Once you start getting symptoms, 50 per cent of people are going to be dead within a year so it's absolutely imperative that you fix that valve," Wood said.
     
     
    The new innovation builds on a technique pioneered by Wood's colleague Dr. John Webb in 2005, which still required general anesthetic and a week-long hospital stay.
     
    "By doing less, actually the patients did better," he said of their work done at the Centre for Heart Valve Innovation involving St. Paul's, VGH and the University of British Columbia.
     
    "It's truly been a revolution," he said, adding the latest procedure means quality of life for patients and cost savings for the health-care system, aspects his team are looking into quantifying.
     
    Sister Theresa Stickley had the "miracle" surgery in 2013 at age 83 when she lived in Squamish, B.C., and became increasingly exhausted and had difficulty breathing.
     
    "The doctor told me I was very close to death and had a couple of months only to live," Stickley said of the surgery that meant she didn't have to have her "whole chest bone sawed through."
     
    "I was walking right after the surgery," she said from the Monastery of the Angels in Los Angeles, where the American-Canadian citizen moved last year.
     
    Max Morton, 79, was the first person to have the procedure as an emergency-room patient at Vancouver General Hospital. He'd already had open heart surgery a decade earlier.
     
    "Within 24 hours I thought, well, this is nice. It was such an amazing experience being awake for the whole thing," he said from his home in Richmond, B.C., adding he went fishing five days later.
     
    "The only reason Max is alive is because we'd been doing the study and we were able to use that technique for Max. That's why he's such an amazing story. No one had ever done it before like that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged After Woman Allegedly Threatened In B.C. Gets New Court Date

    Man Charged After Woman Allegedly Threatened In B.C. Gets New Court Date
    RCMP say 36-year-old Curtis Sagmoen was charged Oct. 17 with disguising his face with intent to commit an offence, uttering threats and weapons offences.

    Man Charged After Woman Allegedly Threatened In B.C. Gets New Court Date

    Family Of Canadian Teacher Imprisoned In Indonesia Meets With Trudeau

    Family Of Canadian Teacher Imprisoned In Indonesia Meets With Trudeau
    The family of a Canadian teacher convicted in Indonesia on child abuse charges says it met with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week to discuss next steps in the case.

    Family Of Canadian Teacher Imprisoned In Indonesia Meets With Trudeau

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting
    The VPD is asking the public for information about a stolen silver Honda Civic, likely used in a drive-by shooting on August 29th.

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months
    Christopher Schafer, 40, Is Wanted On A Canada-wide Warrant For Being Unlawfully At Large

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check
    "He's always like, 'Jagmeet, are you digging into that positivity?'" Singh said this week during an interview, Gurratan at his side, at NDP headquarters in Ottawa.

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says
    New research from Statistics Canada suggests one in 10 sexual assaults that are substantiated by police result in a criminal conviction.

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says