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Heart Valve Replacement And Heart Valve Repair Blog For Patients With Aortic Stenosis, Mitral Regurgitation, Mitral Valve Prolapse, etc.

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Adam Pick - Heart Valves Author & Blogger
Adam Pick
Double Heart Valve Surgery Patient
and Author of The Patient's Guide
To Heart Valve Surgery


> Read My Story Here


Minimally Invasive Mitral Valve Replacement In Virginia

Use Of The Mitral Clip Now Being Tested In Thirty Hospitals Throughout United States

Mitral Valve Replacement Minimally InvasiveChristina Mae Bowles enjoys living independently. The Culpeper, Virginia resident, who is in her eighties, drives herself to the grocery store, does her daily household chores and attends church regularly.

Not too long ago, Mrs. Bowles found herself unable to follow her normal routine. More and more frequently, shortness of breath curtailed her activities. “I couldn’t even talk on the phone because I was so short of breath,” she recalls.

Mrs. Bowles was becoming increasingly debilitated due to a leaky heart valve, or mitral regurgitation, a serious condition affecting an estimated four million Americans. Each beat of her heart, sent blood leaking backward through Mrs. Bowles’ mitral valve. Her heart had to work harder and harder to keep blood circulating through her body.

Unfortunately, no medications specifically treat or cure this condition. The typical way to repair a leaking mitral valve is open-heart surgery through median sternotomy, a rigorous procedure that Mrs. Bowles’ personal physician feared she had become too weak to face.

“I told my doctor that I had to do something,” Mrs. Bowles says. Fortunately, her physician knew that the University of Virginia Health System was about to begin testing a new, minimally invasive procedure that could help.

“Mrs. Bowles is the first person in Virginia to undergo this procedure, and she came through beautifully,” explains Dr. Scott Lim, an interventional cardiologist in UVa’s Heart Valve Center. Mrs. Bowels’ surgery was part of a national clinical trial, called Everest II. Dr. Lim serves as the study’s principal investigator at UVa.

During the procedure, cardiologists made a small incision on Mrs. Bowles’ leg. Through this opening, they threaded a flexible tube called a catheter up to her heart and then placed a tiny clip on her leaking valve.

“Mrs. Bowles was awake and talking shortly after the procedure,” Dr. Lim reports. “She stayed in the hospital for two days and was up and walking. She kept telling us how much she wanted to go to church again.” According to Dr. Lim, “it was both exciting and gratifying to help someone like Ms. Bowles and to see her recover so quickly.”

As for Mrs. Bowles, she says, “I’m pleased and feel very good. My breathing is a whole lot better, and I don’t have to call my daughter every five minutes for help. I’m up and moving again,” she says.

“This trial is at the forefront to a whole new way of healing people with heart disease,” Dr. Lim notes. “Since this approach is a lot less invasive than open heart surgery, we expect patients to heal dramatically faster.” The mitral valve clip, which is inserted under general anesthesia, may also prove less risky than open-heart surgery, which requires the use of a heart-lung machine and stopping the heart in order to repair the valve.

Use of the mitral valve clip is being tested at 30 medical centers throughout the country. UVa is the only hospital in Virginia participating in the clinical trial, which is comparing how mitral valve clip recipients fare versus patients who undergo standard open-heart surgery to repair or replace their leaking valve.

Dr. Lim anticipates that the clinical trial will run for at least a year and enroll over 400 patients nationwide. Physicians will track study participants for several years before final results are reported in late 2009 or early 2010. “If the trial proves successful, we’re intending that UVa’s Heart Valve Center will continue performing these less-invasive procedures. We envision being one of the nation’s centers of excellence for treating heart valve disease,” he says.

To learn more about keyhole valve replacement, a non-invasive cardiac surgery, click here

Source: Enduxo

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All rights reserved. Use of this website, Heart-Valve-Surgery.com assumes acceptance of the terms herein. All logos, pictures and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. This website has been developed and presented by Adam Pick, author of "The Patient's Guide To Heart Valve Surgery." Patient's stories herein, and the language used regarding heart valve replacement and heart valve repair, is intended to inform and educate. HOWEVER, it does not imply that you or anyone else will receive the same outcome. As with any medical procedure, results will vary among individuals, and there could be pain or substantial risks involved. These concerns should be discussed with your health care provider prior to any treatment so that you have proper informed consent and understand that there are no guarantees to healing. Adam Pick does not offer medical advice on this website. This information about valve replacement and repair is offered for educational purposes only. Do not act or rely upon our information without seeking independent professional medical advice. The transmission of this information does not create any relationship between you and Adam Pick. Adam Pick does not guarantees the accuracy, completeness, usefulness, or adequacy of any information available at or from this transmission.
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