What are the operations on the heart. Indications for heart surgery, types of techniques. Diet after surgery


Surgical interventions on the heart are necessary in the treatment of many pathologies of the cardiovascular system that are not amenable to standard drug therapy. With the implementation of surgical treatment, it becomes possible to improve the general condition of the patient and prolong his life. But depending on the pathology, there are different heart operations, which differ in their technique.

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    Operations classification

    Cardiac surgery is aimed at the treatment of cardiac pathologies through indirect or direct effects on this organ. There are such types of heart operations:

    • Closed, while the heart itself is not affected. Such operations are performed outside the heart, so they do not need to use special equipment, with the exception of classical surgical instruments. The cavities of the heart remain closed, hence the name of this category.
    • Open, they require opening the cavities of the heart, which requires the use of special equipment, such as a heart-lung machine. At the time when such a surgical intervention is performed, the heart and lungs are not functioning, which allows the specialist to work with a stopped heart.
    • X-ray surgery, in which special catheters and devices attached to them are used, they are inserted into the cavity of the heart or the lumen of the vessel to correct the defect. The progress of such an operation is controlled using the monitor screen.

    In addition, the types of surgical interventions in cardiac surgery are classified according to the patient's condition and type of defect, as well as the approach to treatment.

    According to the patient's condition and the type of defect, there are:

    • Emergency operations - when you need to act immediately after the diagnosis has become clear, otherwise the pathology threatens the patient's life.
    • Urgent - they do not require a lightning-fast reaction and a quick start of action. They are prepared for several days, but not longer, due to the high risks of complications or death.
    • Planned - interventions, the implementation of which is desirable, but not essential in the near future. They are prescribed by surgeons after consultation with patients.

    Depending on what approach requires surgical treatment:

    • Radical - they are aimed at the complete elimination of vices.
    • Palliative - they are additional or auxiliary, their goal is to improve the patient's condition or prepare him for a radical intervention.

    RF ablation

    Such surgical intervention as radiofrequency ablation refers to X-ray surgical procedures. It is carried out to improve the condition of the patient suffering from heart failure and arrhythmia, and is characterized by low rates of side effects and complications.

    Manipulations during the operation are carried out with special catheters, which are introduced to the patient under local anesthesia. The place of introduction of the catheter, remote from the heart itself, therefore, local anesthesia is carried out at the site of the future introduction of the catheter. In most cases, it is injected into the inguinal vein or femoral artery. After entering the organ, the catheters give electrical impulses to restore the heart rhythm.

    Due to such a supply of impulses that eliminate a small area of ​​​​cardiac tissue that causes pathological excitation of the myocardium, the technique received a second name - cauterization of the heart.

    Valve prosthetics

    Prosthetic heart valves are used when a valve is insufficiency or stenosis, which interferes with the normal passage of blood through it. Valve replacement can be performed during open surgery, endovascular or mini-access.

    In the first case, the patient under general anesthesia is treated with the anterior surface of the chest, the sternum is dissected longitudinally, and the pericardial cavity is opened. To disconnect the heart from blood circulation, the patient is connected to a heart-lung machine, and the myocardium is systematically treated with cold saline during the entire operation in order to avoid its hypoxia.

    To install the prosthesis, a longitudinal incision is made, opening the cavity of the heart, the modified structures of the valve are removed, it is replaced with an artificial one, and the myocardium is sutured. After that, the surgeon "starts" the heart with an electrical impulse or by performing a direct heart massage, and turns off the heart-lung machine.

    After examining the postoperative view of the heart, pericardium and pleura, blood is removed from the cavities and the surgical wound is sutured in layers.

    With endovascular surgery, there is no need to "disconnect" the heart from blood circulation. It is carried out through the leg, namely by introducing a catheter with implantable valves into the femoral artery or vein. After fragments of the damaged valve are destroyed and removed, a prosthesis is put in its place, which straightens itself, having a flexible stent frame.

    If the option with a mini-access was chosen, then the surgeon makes an incision 2-5.5 cm long on the anterior wall of the sternum in the area of ​​the projection of the apex of the heart. Then, through the apex of the heart, a catheter is inserted into the organ, advancing it to the affected valve, and replacing it.

    In the case of valve replacement, there are several types of implants:

    • Mechanical - they are made of metal or plastic. When choosing such an implant, the patient in the future will need to constantly take blood thinners.
    • Biological - they consist of animal tissues and do not require further use of drugs, but after a few decades they need to be replaced.

    Installing a pacemaker

    In the event that the patient suffers from heart failure, cardiomyopathy and cardiac arrhythmias, the specialist may prescribe a minor operation to install a pacemaker.

    The technique for performing such an operation is simple. On the right or left under the left clavicle, local anesthesia is performed with novocaine or lidocaine, after which an incision is made in the skin and subclavian vein to insert a conductor into it, and through it into the superior vena cava and into the heart - an electrode. When the tip of the electrode enters the cavity of the right atrium, the doctor chooses a convenient place for optimal stimulation of the heart muscle, during the search he constantly records ECG changes. When a place is found, the electrode is fixed in the myocardial wall from the inside with the help of antennae or a corkscrew-like attachment. After fixation, it is required to hem a titanium case under the patient's arm, which is installed in the thickness of the pectoral muscle on the left. The wound is sutured and an aseptic bandage is applied.

    Coronary artery bypass grafting

    Coronary artery bypass grafting is a common heart surgery. It is prescribed when atherosclerotic plaques accumulate on the inner walls of the coronary vessels that feed the heart, disrupting blood flow. In addition, indications can be:

    • Stable angina 3-4 functional class.
    • Acute coronary syndrome.
    • Acute myocardial infarction within the first 4–6 hours of onset of pain.
    • Severe ischemia without pain.

    Before the operation, the patient is intravenously administered sedatives and tranquilizers, and the intervention itself is carried out under general anesthesia. Operative access is done by dissection of the sternum or from a mini-access, making an incision in the intercostal space on the left in the area of ​​the projection of the heart. Manipulation can be carried out both with the connection of the patient to the heart-lung machine, and without it.

    The aorta is clamped and connected to the machine, then a vessel is isolated, which will become a bypass. This vessel is brought to the affected coronary artery and its other end is sutured to the aorta. As a result, from the aorta, bypassing the area affected by plaques, the blood will go to the coronary arteries without difficulty.

    Depending on how many arteries supplying the heart are affected and at what intervals, the number of shunts can vary from 2 to 5.

    When the shunts are fixed, metal staples are applied to the edges of the sternum, soft tissues are sutured and an aseptic dressing is applied. In addition, drainage is removed from the pericardial cavity so that there is an outflow of hemorrhagic fluid.

    Operations Glenn and Ross

    The Glenn operation is otherwise known as a bidirectional cavopulmonary connection. In this case, anastomosis of the upper part of the superior vena cava with the right pulmonary artery is performed according to the "end to side" principle.

    Ross surgery is the replacement of a patient's damaged aortic valve with his pulmonary valve, and the removed pulmonary valve is replaced with a prosthesis.

Morning. Petroverigsky lane, 10. At this Moscow address in the Kitay-Gorod area, I arrived at the angiography.su federal center for the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases, which is part of the state research center for preventive medicine, to put on a sterile suit again and visit in the operating room.

Angiography is a method of examining blood vessels using x-rays and contrast fluid. It is used to detect damage and defects. Without it, the operation that I am going to talk about - stenting - would not have been possible.

There will still be some blood. I think I should warn impressionable people about this before they open the post in its entirety.

Who has never heard of cholesterol plaques, he did not watch the show of Elena Malysheva. Plaques are deposits on the inner walls of blood vessels that have accumulated over the years. They are similar in texture to thick wax. The plaque consists not only of cholesterol, calcium in the blood sticks to it, making the deposits even more dense. And this whole structure slowly but surely clogs the vessels, preventing our fiery motor, or rather the pump, from delivering nutrients and oxygen to various organs, including the heart itself.

Before the advent of the stenting method, which will be discussed, the doctors were armed with only the surgical method of bypass surgery, which became popularly famous thanks to Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin's heart surgery in 1996 in a round operating room. I remember this case vividly (a memory from childhood), although a lot of famous people have done a similar operation.

Shunting is an abdominal operation. A person is given anesthesia, they cut the chest (they cut it, they can’t do it with one scalpel), they stop the heart and start the artificial circulation system. The beating heart beats very strongly and interferes with the operation, so it has to be stopped. To get to all the arteries and shunt, you need to get the heart and turn it over. A shunt is a donor artery taken from the patient himself, for example, from the arm. A lot of stress on the body.

During stenting, the patient remains conscious (everything happens under local anesthesia), can hold his breath or take deep breaths at the request of the doctor. Blood loss is minimal, and the incisions are tiny, because the arteries are entered through a catheter, which is usually inserted into the femoral artery. And they put a stent - a mechanical vasodilator. All in all, an elegant operation (-:

The operation for Sergei Iosifovich was done in three stages. I ended up on the final operation in the series. You cannot place all stents at once.

The surgical table and the angiograph (a semicircular device hanging over the patient) form a single mechanism that works together. The table moves back and forth, and the machine rotates around the table to take x-rays of the heart from different angles.

The patient is placed on the table, fixed and connected to the heart monitor.

To make it clear the device of the angiograph, I will show it separately. It's a small angiograph, not as big as the ones in the operating room. If necessary, it can even be brought to the ward.

It works quite simply. An emitter is installed below, a converter is installed at the top (a smile is pasted on it), from which a signal with an image is already transmitted to the monitor. Scattering of X-rays in space does not actually occur, however, everyone present in the operating room is protected. About eight such operations are performed per day.

Through a vessel on the arm or thigh, as in our case, a special catheter is inserted.

A thin metal wire, a conductor, is inserted through the catheter into the artery to deliver the stent to the site of the blockage. I was amazed at its length!

The stent - a mesh cylinder - is attached to the end of this wire in a compressed state. It is mounted on a balloon that will be inflated at the right time to deploy the stent. Initially, this design is not thicker than the conductor itself.

This is what an open stent looks like.

And this is a scale model of a different type of stent. In the case when the walls of the vessels are damaged, they are installed with a membrane. They not only support the vessel in the open state, but also serve as the walls of the vessels.

All through the same catheter, an iodine-containing contrast agent is injected. With the blood flow, it fills the coronary arteries. This allows the x-ray to visualize them and calculate the blockage sites, on which stents will be placed.

Here is such an Amazon basin obtained by injecting contrast.

All eyes on monitors! The entire stent placement process is observed through X-ray television.

After the stent is delivered into place, the balloon on which it is attached must be inflated. This is done using a device with a manometer (pressure meter). This device, which looks like a large syringe, is visible in the photo with long conductor wires.

The stent expands and is pressed into the inner wall of the vessel. To ensure that the stent has expanded correctly, the balloon remains inflated for twenty to thirty seconds. It is then deflated and pulled out of the artery on a wire. The stent remains and maintains the lumen of the vessel.

Depending on the size of the affected vessel, one or more stents may be used. In this case, they are overlapped one after the other.

And here's how the stent works. Below are screenshots from the X-ray TV. In the first picture, we see only one artery, a curly one. But another one should be visible, below it. Because of the plaque, the blood flow is completely blocked.

The thick sausage on the second is a stent that has just been deployed. The arteries are not visible because the contrast is not running in them, but the wires are just visible.

The third one shows the result. An artery appeared, blood flowed. Now compare the first picture with the third one again.

The concept of expanding the affected areas of the vessel with the help of a certain frame was proposed by Charles Dotter forty years ago. The development of the method took a long time, the first operation using this technology was performed by a group of French surgeons only in 1986. And only in 1993, the effectiveness of the method was proven to restore the patency of the coronary artery and keep it in a new state in the future.

Currently, foreign companies have developed about 400 different models of stents. In our case, this is Cordis from Johnson & Johnson. Artem Shanoyan, head of the department of X-ray endovascular diagnostic and treatment methods at the center, answered my question about Russian stent manufacturers that they simply do not exist.

The operation takes about half an hour. A pressure bandage is applied to the puncture site. From the operating room, the patient is sent to the intensive care unit, and two hours later to the general ward, from where you can already scribble joyful SMS to relatives. And in a few days they will be able to see each other at home.

Lifestyle restrictions typical for heart patients are usually removed after stenting, the person returns to normal life, and observation is carried out periodically by a doctor at the place of residence.

Open heart surgery is one of the methods of treating cardiovascular diseases, in which special surgical procedures are performed. The general principle is that there is an intervention in the human body in order to carry out the necessary activities on the open heart. In other words, this is such an operation, during which an opening or dissection of the region of the human sternum is performed, affecting the tissues of the organ itself and its vessels.

Open heart surgery

Statistics show that the most common intervention of this type among adults is an operation in which artificial blood flow is created from the aorta to healthy areas of the coronary arteries - coronary artery bypass grafting.

This operation is performed for the treatment of severe coronary heart disease, which occurs due to the development of atherosclerosis, in which there is a narrowing of the vessels supplying blood to the myocardium, their elasticity decreases.

The general principle of the operation: the patient's own biomaterial (a fragment of an artery or vein) is taken and sutured in the area between the aorta and the coronary vessel in order to bypass the place affected by atherosclerosis, in which blood circulation is impaired. After the operation is performed, the blood supply to a certain area of ​​​​the heart muscle is restored. This artery / vein supplies the heart with the necessary blood flow, while the artery in which the pathological process occurs is bypassed.


Coronary artery bypass grafting

Today, taking into account the progress in medicine, for surgical treatment on the heart, it is enough to make only small incisions in the corresponding area. Another intervention, more complex, will not be needed. Therefore, the concept of "open heart surgery" sometimes misleads people.

Reasons for open heart surgery

  • The need to replace or restore the patency of blood vessels for the correct flow of blood into the heart.
  • The need to repair defective areas in the heart (for example, valves).
  • The need to place special medical devices to maintain the working capacity of the heart.
  • The need for transplantation operations.

What you need to know about coronary artery bypass surgery?

Time spending

According to medical data, this type of operation takes no less than four and no more than six hours. In rare, especially severe cases, when the operation requires more work (creation of several shunts), an increase in this period may be observed.

The first night after heart surgery and all medical procedures, patients spend in the intensive care unit. After three to seven days have passed (the exact number of days is determined by the patient's well-being), the person is transferred to a regular ward.

Operation Hazards

Despite the qualifications of doctors, no one is immune from unplanned situations. What is the danger of surgery, and what risk can it carry:

  • infection of the chest due to an incision (this risk is especially high for people who are obese, diabetic, or undergo a second operation);
  • myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke;
  • heart rhythm disturbances;
  • thromboembolism;
  • increased body temperature for a long time;
  • cardiac discomfort of any nature;
  • pain of a different nature in the chest area;
  • pulmonary edema;
  • short-term amnesia and other transient memory problems;
  • loss of a significant amount of blood.

These negative consequences, as statistics show, occur much more often when using an artificial blood supply device.


The risk of unpleasant consequences is always present

Preparation period

In order for the planned operation and general treatment to be successful, it is important not to miss anything significant before they begin. To do this, the patient must tell the doctor:

  • About medications that are currently being used. These may include medications prescribed by another doctor, or those that the patient purchases himself, including dietary supplements, vitamins, etc. This is important information and should be announced before surgery.
  • About all chronic and past diseases, health deviations that are currently available (runny nose, herpes on the lips, indigestion, fever, sore throat, fluctuations in blood pressure, etc.).

The patient should be prepared for the fact that two weeks before the operation, the doctor will ask him to refrain from smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, taking vasoconstrictor drugs (for example, nasal drops, ibuprofen, etc.).

On the day of the operation, the patient will be asked to use a special antibacterial soap, which significantly reduces the risk of infection during the operation. In addition, a few hours before the intervention, you can not eat food and drink water.

Operation

When open heart surgery is performed, the following actions are sequentially performed:

  • The patient is placed on the operating table.
  • He is given general anesthesia.
  • When the anesthesia begins to take effect and the patient falls asleep, the doctor opens the chest. To do this, he makes an incision in the appropriate area (usually it is no more than 25 sentiments in length).
  • The doctor dissects the sternum, partially or completely. This allows access to the heart and aorta.
  • Once access is secured, the patient's heart is stopped and connected to a heart-lung machine. This allows the surgeon to calmly perform all manipulations. Today, technologies are used that allow in some cases to perform this operation without stopping the heartbeat, while the number of complications is lower. than traditional intervention.
  • The doctor creates a shunt around the damaged part of the artery.
  • The cut part of the chest is fixed with a special material, most often with a special wire, but in some cases plates are used. These plates are often used for the elderly or for people who have had frequent surgeries.
  • After the operation is completed, the incision is sutured.

Postoperative period

After the operation is completed and the patient wakes up, he will find two or three tubes in his chest. The role of these tubes is to drain excess fluid from the area around the heart (drainage) into a special vessel. In addition, an intravenous tube is installed for the flow of therapeutic and nutrient solutions into the body and a catheter into the bladder to remove urine. In addition to the tubes, devices are connected to the patient to monitor the work of the heart.

The patient should not worry, in case of questions or discomfort, he can always contact the medical workers who will be assigned to monitor him and promptly respond if necessary.


The duration of the recovery period depends not only on physiology, but also on the person himself.

Each patient should understand that rehabilitation after surgery is not a quick process. After six weeks of treatment, some improvements can be observed, and only after six months will all the benefits of the operation become visible.

But each patient is able to speed up this rehabilitation process, while avoiding new heart ailments, which reduces the risk of a second operation. To do this, it is recommended to take the following measures:

  • follow the diet and special diet prescribed by the attending physician;
  • limit salty, fatty, sweet foods);
  • devote time to physiotherapy exercises, walks in the fresh air;
  • stop drinking alcohol frequently;
  • monitor the level of cholesterol in the blood;
  • track blood pressure.

If these measures are followed, the postoperative period will pass quickly and without complications. But you should not rely on general recommendations, the advice of your attending physician, who has studied the medical history in detail and is able to draw up an action plan and a diet during the recovery period, is much more valuable.

Heart surgery is performed only when other methods of therapy cannot help the patient's condition. Heart surgery can prevent death in a patient, but the risk of an adverse outcome remains quite high.

Despite the fact that cardiac surgery does not stand still and develops, heart surgery is very difficult to perform. The best specialists in cardiac surgery are engaged in it. But even this important fact cannot shield the operated person from complex consequences.

Complications in the postoperative period can even lead to death.

Indications for surgery

As mentioned earlier, cardiac surgery is used in cases where there are no other options to save the patient's life. Heart surgery requires a very serious approach.

Heart transplantation is considered the most complex and serious surgical intervention. The operation is carried out under the strict supervision of highly qualified specialists.

Indications for heart surgery of any complexity are as follows:

  • transient development of ailments of the cardiovascular system;
  • in the absence of results with drug treatment;
  • late referral to a medical facility.

Heart surgery helps to improve the general condition of the patient and eliminate the symptoms of a tormenting disease.

Cardiac cavity surgery is performed only after a complete diagnostic study and an accurate diagnosis by a cardio specialist.

Methods of surgical interventions


What are heart surgeries?

This is a pretty important question if you are going to have this major surgery. You will also need to know how the operation goes and how it is done.

This is necessary in order to make, perhaps, the main decision in your life, on which all future fate will depend.

Closed Interventions

This is a heart operation that does not affect the organ itself. It is done without touching the heart. For its implementation, there is no need for special equipment, except for such as the instruments of the surgeon.

The heart cavity does not "open". That is why it is called "closed".

Such an intervention is performed at the initial stage of the development of the disease, when the patient's condition can only be improved by operations.

Open Interventions

There is also open surgery. This type of operation requires the opening of the heart cavities in order to eradicate the existing pathology.

Open heart surgery is performed using a special device - heart-lung machine or heart-lung machine.

With an open intervention, the cavities are open, the heart and pulmonary organs are disconnected from blood circulation. This makes it possible to intervene on a "dry" organ.

All blood through the vein goes to specialized surgical equipment. There they pass through artificial lungs, enriched with oxygen and release carbon dioxide, transforming from the blood of a vein into an arterial one. Then it is driven by a special pump into the aorta of the operated person, in other words, into the systemic circulation.

Innovative techniques help to create all the "insides" of the equipment (also an artificial lung), with which the patient's blood comes into contact, "disposable", that is, once for one person. This will reduce the possible disastrous consequences.

Today, the heart-lung machine helps to stop the functioning of the heart organ and lungs for several hours. Thereby allowing to carry out the hardest operations of open character.

X-ray surgical interventions


This type of intervention began to be used quite recently. But thanks to innovative equipment, they occupy an important place in heart surgery.

With the help of a special catheter, surgical instruments are inserted into a strip section of the cardiac organ, or into the opening of the vessel. Further, with the help of the pressure that the device creates, the valves of the abdominal incisions are opened. They amplify or distort the partitions, or vice versa, using the device, the distortion is eliminated.

Special tubes are introduced into the lumen of the necessary vessel, thereby helping to slightly open it.

The process during such operations is carefully monitored by a special computer and control is made over each action. Thanks to this, operations are performed with less risk of injury and with a greater likelihood of a favorable outcome.

If you have had an X-ray surgery, the effectiveness of it is higher.

Action plan before surgery

Before surgery on the cardiac organ, preparation is necessary. If you have enough time, at least a few days or weeks, you need to take care of your body. Eat healthy, nutrient-rich foods.

Get plenty of rest, walk in the fresh air, do physical exercises that the treating specialist recommended to you.

Proper nutrition


Try to eat only natural foods every day and more than once, even if you have no appetite. Your body needs to consume plenty of proteins, vitamins and minerals.

Thanks to a healthy diet, the surgical intervention itself and the rehabilitation period are more favorable.

Relaxation

Do not force your body to overwork before surgery. The more you rest, the stronger and stronger your body will become.

If you want to visit relatives or invite you to visit, say that you need to gain strength before a difficult process. Relatives will always understand you and will not be offended.

Nicotine use

It's no secret for everyone that smoking affects negatively even the body of a completely healthy person. What can we say about patients with cardiac pathology.

Nicotine affects the heart in the following negative way: it develops arteriosclerosis, increases pressure in the blood vessels, and makes the heart vessels tighten. It also narrows blood-forming arteries and increases the concentration of mucous fluid in the pulmonary organs.

This leads to more difficult adaptation after surgery.

rehabilitation period


After a surgical intervention on the cardiac organ, if an insufficient amount of time has passed, it is even forbidden to get out of the ward bed. The entire rehabilitation period, the patient is in the intensive care unit.

This department is intended for patients who have a risk of death.

A special dietary diet plays a huge role in rehabilitation. His attending specialist appoints individually for each patient. You can start eating only with lean gruels and vegetable broths, but after a few days the diet increases significantly.

After the patient is transferred to a regular ward, as a rule, the attending physician will allow the use of the following products:

  • cereals from coarse grinding (barley, barley groats, unpolished rice). You can also include oatmeal in the diet 2-3 times a week;
  • dairy production: fat-free curd mass, cheese with a fat content of not more than 20%;
  • vegetables and fruits: fresh, steamed and in various salads;
  • small pieces of boiled chicken, turkey and rabbit. As well as homemade steamed cutlets;
  • various varieties of fish: herring, salmon, capelin, etc.;
  • all soups without fried ingredients and without fat content.

Under no circumstances should the following foods be consumed.