Open heart surgery. What are heart surgeries? 40 Opening the chest


The treatment of heart diseases using surgery is the field of surgery and cardiology, which is called cardiac surgery. To date, cardiac surgery is the most effective method of treating certain types of heart defects, coronary heart disease and helps prevent the development of myocardial infarction, as well as eliminate its consequences - aneurysms.
Surgical intervention is used only in cases where conservative methods of treatment cease to help and the patient's condition worsens. The untimely appeal of the patient to the doctor can also lead to heart surgery, when only surgical intervention remains the only way to help.

Today, cardiac surgery is one of the most actively developing and technically equipped branches of medicine. Every year, 700 patients undergo open heart surgery. The bulk of operations are in the United States. In Europe, the number of operations is 4 times less. In Asian countries, cardiac surgery is practically absent. In Russia, the number of heart surgeries is below the required minimum. This statistic is due to the fact that heart surgeries are expensive. In addition to open heart surgery, surgical intervention is also carried out without opening parts of the heart (for example, implantation of pacemakers, angioplasty).

Surgery is required for diseases such as:

1. Ischemic heart disease and its consequences (myocardial infarction);
2. Heart defects.
3. Violation of the heart rhythm.

Cardiac ischemia

Ischemic heart disease occurs as a result of insufficient blood supply to the working myocardium. The main cause of coronary heart disease is atherosclerosis (plaque formation on the walls of blood vessels). A slight narrowing of the lumen of the vessel leads to angina pectoris (a person feels pain only when the heart's need for oxygen is increased, for example, during exercise). A strong narrowing of the lumen of the vessel causes pain even at rest, and the duration of pain attacks can also become more frequent and increase - unstable angina. With a strong violation of the coronary blood flow, the death of the muscle fibers of the heart occurs - this is a myocardial infarction.

One of the severe complications of myocardial infarction is the formation of a post-infarction aneurysm of the left ventricle. An aneurysm is a bubble-like bulge. It is formed due to the fact that dead tissue is replaced by scar tissue, which in turn is not able to contract. Under the pressure of healthy contracting fibers, the scar tissue swells, part of the blood is retained in the ventricle in the area of ​​aneurysmal expansion. With each contraction, organs and tissues receive less blood in an amount equal to the volume of the aneurysm. This is its main negative meaning. Very often, blood clots form in the aneurysm area, which can break off and be transferred with the blood flow to any organs, causing their heart attack (death of part or all of the organ). When a blood clot enters the brain, a stroke occurs.

Surgical intervention (heart surgery) for coronary heart disease is aimed at restoring the normal nutrition of all parts of the heart. The degree of damage to the coronary arteries will depend on what kind of operation should be done. An analysis of the state of the vessels is carried out using coronary angiography - this is an X-ray contrast research method that allows you to determine the location, nature and degree of narrowing of the coronary artery. Most often, stenting of the coronary artery, which causes pain, is done. In the case of severe atherosclerotic lesions of the coronary vessels, the patient needs coronary artery bypass grafting.

Types of surgery for coronary heart disease

Angioplasty and stenting of the coronary arteries

Angioplasty and stenosis is aimed at removing obstructions to blood flow by expanding the artery from the inside.
The operation is carried out as follows: with the help of special equipment, a catheter is inserted through a puncture in the thigh area under the control of a fluorographic preparation into the artery that feeds the heart. It must reach the site of narrowing of the artery, where a special balloon is inflated with a stent - a device that does not allow the artery to subside. The stent remains in the artery, and the catheter is brought out through the same hole in the thigh.

Coronary artery bypass grafting (ACS)

Coronary artery bypass grafting - restoring the blood supply to the heart muscle by creating a new blood flow path around the affected area of ​​the coronary vessel using shunts - pieces of arteries or veins taken from the patient himself (for example, in the limb area). This operation is aimed at preventing myocardial infarction. To date, CABG operations are performed both with the use of a heart-lung machine and on a beating heart (cardiac immobility is only in the operated area).
One of the types of coronary artery bypass surgery is mammary coronary artery bypass grafting (MCB). The internal mammary artery is used as a shunt. The use of this vessel is beneficial, since in this case no additional incisions are needed due to the close location of the thoracic artery and the heart, and also because atherosclerotic plaques do not form in the artery, and therefore, the service life of such a shunt is quite long.

Plastic surgery of postinfarction aneurysm of the left ventricle

The essence of the intervention is to reduce the volume of the left ventricle by delimiting the area of ​​aneurysmal expansion and the healthy part of the left ventricle. The surgeon removes the blood clots that have arisen in the area of ​​the aneurysm, then sews a septum made of dense elastic human tissue across the cavity of the left ventricle. Two cavities are formed: one with normal, actively contracting walls, the other - from scar tissue that is not able to contract, but does not interfere with the normal functioning of the heart. Thus, blood circulation is restored and the risk of a blood clot breaking off is eliminated.

Heart defects

Heart disease is called defects in the structure of the heart, which lead to disruption of normal blood circulation, there is stagnation of blood in the pulmonary or systemic circulation.
The following violations are distinguished:

- stenosis (narrowing) of the valvular apparatus;
With valve stenosis, it stops passing the required volume of blood through the reduced opening.
- insufficiency of the valvular apparatus;
The valve leaflets cannot close tightly and allow blood to pass in the direction opposite to normal blood flow.

-defects of the interventricular and interatrial septum;
With defects in these partitions, blood enters from a cavity with high pressure into a cavity with less pressure, and venous blood, poor in oxygen, mixes with oxygenated arterial blood, which leads to oxygen starvation of tissues.
Heart defects can be congenital or acquired. Most of them do not require surgery. Sometimes the disease proceeds unnoticed by the patient. Congenital heart disease can disappear with age, but if this does not happen and signs of heart failure increase, then surgery is required.

Treatment of heart defects is aimed at correcting the existing mechanical defect in the functioning of the heart.

There are the following types of surgical intervention:

Prosthetics and plastic heart valves

Operations to install prostheses are performed on the open heart, using a heart-lung machine.
Valve prostheses are mechanical and biological.

Mechanical valves

Mechanical valves are made of metal and plastic. The validity period of such prostheses is about 80 years. However, when using them, a person has to take anticoagulants daily, since blood clots are easily formed on the prostheses, which contribute to the formation of blood clots. In rare cases, a breakdown of a mechanical prosthesis is possible, which most often leads to the death of the patient. Mechanical valve prostheses can be in the form
- rotating disc
The disc completely covers the hole, but is fixed at one end only. Blood moving in the right direction presses on the disc, turns it on the hinge and opens the hole; when the blood moves back, the disc completely covers the hole.
- built on the principle of a ball in a grid
The blood flow in the right direction pushes the ball out of the hole, pressing it to the bottom of the mesh and thereby creating the possibility of further passage of blood; the reverse flow pushes the ball into the hole, which is thus closed and does not allow blood to pass through.

biological valves

Biological prostheses, usually made from animal heart tissue, are considered more efficient. After their installation, treatment with anticoagulants, which have many contraindications, is not necessary. Such a prosthesis works from 10 to 20 years, its aging occurs gradually and you can prepare in advance for its replacement in a planned manner. Of course, in this case, a second operation is needed.
Biological valves do not require mandatory anticoagulation (although it is often recommended), but wear out faster than mechanical valves.

Plastic defects of the interatrial and interventricular septum

If the structure of the septum is violated, with a small defect (the size of the hole is not more than 3 cm), it is sutured, and with a significant size, a plastic patch is performed (using synthetic tissues or autopericardium)

Heart rhythm disorder

Cardiac arrhythmias are violations of the sequence, rhythm and frequency of contractions of the heart. Arrhythmias can occur as a result of metabolic disorders, for example, endocrine and autonomic, or the effects of certain drugs. They are also often caused by heart disease, and sometimes - intoxication.
The danger of arrhythmia is that it can lead to ventricular fibrillation (scattered contraction of fibers).
For the treatment of arrhythmias, drugs, catheter ablation, or a pacemaker (pacemaker) are implanted.

Surgical methods for the treatment of arrhythmias:

RF ablation

This is a minimally invasive surgical method that is used for:
- high heart rate with a pronounced pulse deficit;
- atrial fibrillation;
- progressive heart failure;
- supraventricular tachycardia.

The method of radiofrequency ablation consists in passing a special catheter to the area of ​​the heart that causes an abnormal pathological rhythm. An electrical impulse is applied to this department, which destroys the tissue site that sets the wrong rhythm.
Ablation restores normal heart rhythm.

Pacemaker implantation

The operation is done in patients with heart rhythm disturbances that threaten life. The pacemaker aims to control and restore the normal contraction of the heart.
Doctors implant a special device under the skin or under the pectoral muscle. Two or three electrodes depart from the pacemaker, which are connected to the chambers of the heart to transmit an electrical impulse to them.

Defibrillator implantation

The principle of operation of a defibrillator is similar to a pacemaker. Its distinctive feature is the elimination of too fast and too slow heart rate. The heart rate is assessed using electrodes. Installing a defibrillator is similar to installing a pacemaker.

Installing a defibrillator is indicated for ventricular tachycardia.

Heart transplant

In critical cases, when the heart cannot perform its function and does not respond to any treatment, they resort to a heart transplant. Thanks to this operation, doctors prolong the life of the patient for a period of about 5 years. Research is currently underway to extend the life of people who have undergone heart transplants.

Postoperative recovery period

An important stage of recovery after surgery is the period of postoperative recovery. Strict monitoring of human health is required. This period is different and individual for each patient. Patients are prescribed special cardio training, diets. Emotional calm is needed.

Heart surgeries are dangerous due to their complications. The main signs of complications are fever, pain in the operated area, tachycardia, drop in blood pressure, shortness of breath. The ECG shows characteristic changes. The recovery period lasts six months - a year.

An example of monitoring the health of postoperative patients is the work of the doctor of medical sciences, professor, arrhythmologist Andrey Vyacheslavovich Ardashev. He does over 200 surgeries a year. Postoperative monitoring of patients began in 2011 with the help of the project. The doctor controls both the conclusion of the cardiovisor and the ECG itself in postoperative patients. Using the site service helps to monitor the recovery of the health of operated people via the Internet. This is a huge plus, since a large number of patients come to Moscow from all over Russia in order to have heart surgery. They pass the postoperative period already at home. Using the Cardiovisor allows you to take ECG readings at home and send them to the doctor using the site.

Rostislav Zhadeiko, especially for the project .

Such surgical manipulations are within the competence of cardiac surgeons, and are one of the most complex in nature. Heart surgery is a last resort in the treatment of serious cardiovascular diseases, which are resorted to in order to improve the quality of life of the patient, and sometimes even save his life.


In Russia, this type of surgical intervention is not practiced as often as, for example, in America or in European countries. First of all, this is due to the cost of such treatment: not every citizen of the Russian Federation is able to pay the costs of the operation out of his own pocket.

At the same time, this branch of medicine in domestic medical institutions is constantly developing, which makes it possible for patients to receive qualified advice and assistance when applying.

When is heart surgery performed - indications and timing

The main pathologies that may require surgical intervention are:

  • Poor myocardial blood supply. A similar condition in medical circles is called coronary heart disease. IHD can lead to the formation of an aneurysm, extensive thrombosis. With all the described ailments, certain surgical procedures on the heart may be required.
  • Heart defects that have both innate and acquired nature. Many defects in the structure of the heart valve are incompatible with life. Therefore, such pathologies are diagnosed even in the prenatal period, and the operation itself is carried out in the first days of the baby's life.
  • Failures in the frequency, sequence and rhythm of heart contraction, - arrhythmias.

Common indications for heart surgery are the following pathological conditions:

  1. Active deterioration of vital signs against the background of the development of underlying heart disease.
  2. The inability of drug therapy to cope with the manifestations of the disease.
  3. Noticeable deterioration in the functioning of the heart muscle that cannot be eliminated with medications.
  4. advanced stage of the disease. This happens when the patient does not seek qualified help in time.

It should also be taken into account that any surgical manipulations on the heart carry a risk and are fraught with the development of a number of exacerbations in the rehabilitation period. Doctors turn to such treatment when other measures do not bring the desired effect.

In addition, heart surgery requires a comprehensive examination of the patient and careful preparation for the operation. This will ensure a successful recovery and minimize the likelihood of postoperative complications.

Based on the patient's condition, the type of surgical intervention under consideration is:

  • emergency. In such a situation, examination and preparation are carried out in a minimal amount, and the operation itself is carried out as soon as possible. This type of manipulation is prescribed for life-threatening conditions, when every minute counts: with aneurysm rupture, extensive myocardial infarction. Often, emergency interventions on the heart are performed on newborns with complex heart disease.
  • Urgent. There is time for diagnostic and preparatory measures, but not much. After receiving the results of the examination, surgical treatment of the heart disease is carried out.
  • planned. In some medical sources, this type of operation is called elective. After a detailed study of the patient's condition by a cardiac surgeon, a final decision is made on the need for surgical intervention. Together with the patient or his parents (when operating on a child), the exact date of the operation is agreed.

Closed and open heart surgeries - how they are performed and to whom they are prescribed

Based on the type of defect that needs to be eliminated, various methods of surgical intervention are used:

Note!

Not so long ago, a new direction in the treatment of heart defects began to be applied in cardiac surgery - X-ray surgery. In essence, they are minimally invasive - the doctor makes small incisions or punctures, and brings special instruments to the heart zone through the catheter. An access point can be, incl. and femoral vessels. Using cans, you can increase the diameter of the narrowed valve - or reduce it by opening the patch (its design is similar to an umbrella). With the help of expanding tubules, vascular stenosis is eliminated.

The progress of the entire procedure is monitored through the monitor screen - this ensures the effectiveness of the operation, as well as its safety for the patient. In addition, during the manipulation under consideration, general anesthesia is not used: the doctor is limited to anesthesia with mini-accesses.

X-ray surgery can be both the main and auxiliary methods of treating errors in the work of the heart.


Most popular types of heart surgery

To date, the following operations are used in cardiac surgery practice:

1. With coronary heart disease:

2. In case of diagnosing heart disease:

3. In the presence of arrhythmia:

In cases where the treatment of individual anatomical structures of the heart is impossible or ineffective, and the main organ for pumping blood cannot cope with its main function, they perform heart transplant .

This operation is fraught with a number of complications, among which is graft rejection.

Today, scientists are conducting research to maximize the life extension of those who have survived heart transplants.

How are operations performed?

An operation is an intervention in the human body with a violation of its integrity. Each disease requires an individual approach, which naturally affects the way the operation is performed.

How heart surgery is done: preparation for surgery

Heart surgery (cardiac surgery) is one of the most difficult to perform, dangerous and responsible type of surgical intervention.

Planned operations are usually carried out in the morning. Therefore, the patient is not allowed to eat or drink in the evening (for 8-10 hours), and immediately before the operation, a cleansing enema is given. This is necessary in order for the anesthesia to work as it should.

The place where operations are performed must be sterile. In medical institutions, special rooms are used for these purposes - operating rooms, which are regularly sterilized by quartz treatment and special antiseptics. In addition, all medical personnel who take part in the operation wash themselves before the procedure (you even have to rinse your mouth with an antiseptic solution), and also change into special sterile clothes, put on sterile gloves on your hands.

The patient is also put on shoe covers, a cap on his head, and the operation field is treated with an antiseptic. If necessary, before the operation, the patient's hair is shaved if the surgical field is covered with it. All these manipulations are necessary to avoid infection of the surgical wound with bacteria or other dangerous active microorganisms.

Narcosis or anesthesia

Anesthesia is a general anesthesia of the body with its immersion in drug-induced sleep. During surgical interventions on the heart, general anesthesia is used, and in some cases, during endovideosurgical operations, spinal anesthesia, in which a puncture is made into the spinal cord at the level of the lower back. Substances that cause pain relief can be administered in various ways - intravenously, through the respiratory tract (inhalation anesthesia), intramuscularly or in combination.

Course of open heart surgery

After the person goes into medical sleep and ceases to feel pain, the operation itself begins. The surgeon uses a scalpel to open the skin and soft tissues on the chest. Cardiac surgery may also require an “opening” of the chest. To do this, with the help of special surgical instruments, the ribs are sawn. Thus, doctors “get” to the operated organ and put special dilators on the wound, which provide better access to the heart. Junior medical staff, using suction, removes blood from the surgical field, and also cauterizes cut capillaries and blood vessels so that they do not bleed.

If necessary, the patient is connected to an artificial heart machine, which will temporarily pump blood through the body, while the operated organ is artificially suspended. Depending on what kind of heart surgery is performed (what kind of damage is eliminated), appropriate manipulations are carried out: it can be the replacement of blocked coronary arteries, the replacement of heart valves in case of defects, vein bypass surgery or the replacement of an entire organ.

Extreme care is required from the surgeon and all staff, as the life of the patient depends on it. It should also be added that during the operation, blood pressure and some other indicators are constantly monitored, which indicate the patient's condition.

Endovideosurgery: stenosis and angioplasty

Today, more and more often, heart surgery is performed not by an open method - with a chest incision, but with access through the femoral artery on the leg, under the control of an X-ray machine and a microscopic video camera. After preparing for operation, which is similar for all types of surgical interventions, and putting the patient into a medical sleep, access to the femoral artery is opened through an incision in the leg. A catheter and a probe with a video camera at the end are inserted into it, thanks to which access to the heart is provided.

In this way, angioplasty with stenosis of blood vessels is carried out in cardiac surgery, which is necessary for blockage of the coronary vessels that feed the heart itself with blood. Special stands are installed in the narrowed vessels - cylindrical implants that do not allow the arteries to clog anymore, which prevents the possibility of developing coronary disease.

After the main part of the operation is over and the heart is on its own again functions, stitching of damaged nerves, vessels and tissues is performed. The wound is again treated with an antiseptic, the surgical field is closed, soft tissues and skin are sutured with special threads. A medical bandage is applied to the external wound. After the end of all these procedures, the patient is taken out of anesthesia.

Other types of operations

In addition to the abdominal operations described above, there are also operations performed in a less traumatic way:

  • Laparoscopy - is performed using a laparoscope, which is inserted through 1-2 cm incisions in the skin. Most often used in gynecology, gastrectomy and other operations in the abdominal cavity. You can read more about this
  • Laser surgery - is carried out using a special laser beam. Usually, operations are performed in this way on the eyes, when removing skin formations, etc. You can read more about the method

Cardiovascular diseases, unfortunately, occupy one of the first places in terms of mortality in our country. But cardiology does not stand still, but is constantly being improved. In this area, new methods of treatment are constantly emerging and the most modern technologies are being introduced. Naturally, people suffering from severe heart diseases are interested in all the innovations in cardiology, and therefore in various methods of surgical interventions.

When is Cardiac Surgery Used?

Absolutely not any violation in the work of cardiac activity entails surgical intervention. There are absolutely clear criteria on which the attending physician relies, recommending this or that cardiological operation. Such indications may be:

  • Significant and rapidly progressive deterioration of the patient's condition associated with chronic heart failure.
  • Acute conditions that threaten the life of the patient.
  • Extremely low efficiency of simple drug treatment with clear dynamics to the deterioration of the general condition.
  • The presence of advanced cardiac pathologies that developed against the background of a late visit to the doctor and the lack of adequate treatment.
  • both congenital and acquired.
  • Ischemic pathologies leading to the development of a heart attack.

Types of heart surgery

Today, there are many different surgical manipulations on the human heart. All these operations can be divided according to several basic principles.

  • Urgency.
  • Technique.

Operations differing in urgency

Any surgical intervention will fall into one of the following groups:

  1. emergency operations. The surgeon performs such heart operations if there is a real threat to the patient's life. It can be a sudden thrombosis, myocardial infarction, the onset of aortic dissection, heart injury. In all these situations, the patient is sent to the operating table immediately after the diagnosis is made, usually even without further tests and examinations.
  2. Urgent. In this situation, there is no such urgency, it is possible to conduct clarifying examinations, but it is also impossible to postpone the operation, as a critical situation may develop in the near future.
  3. Planned. After a long observation by the attending cardiologist, the patient receives a referral to the hospital. Here he undergoes all the necessary examinations and preparation procedures before surgery. The cardiac surgeon clearly sets the time of the operation. In case of problems, for example, a cold, it can be postponed to another day or even a month. There is no threat to life in such a situation.


Differences in technique

In this group, all operations can be divided into ongoing:

  1. Opening the chest. This is a classic method that is used in the most severe cases. The surgeon makes an incision from the neck to the navel and opens the chest completely. Thus, the doctor gets direct access to the heart. Such manipulation is carried out under general anesthesia and the patient is transferred to the cardiopulmonary bypass system. As a result of the fact that the surgeon works with a "dry" heart, he can eliminate even the most severe pathologies with a minimal risk of complications. This method is resorted to in the presence of problems with the coronary artery, aorta and other great vessels, with severe atrial fibrillation and other problems.
  2. Without opening the chest. This type of surgical intervention belongs to the so-called minimally invasive techniques. There is absolutely no need for open access to the heart. These techniques are much less traumatic for the patient, but they are not suitable in all cases.
  3. X-ray surgical technique. This method in medicine is relatively new, but it has already proven itself very well. The main advantage is that after these manipulations the patient recovers very quickly and complications are extremely rare. The essence of this technique lies in the fact that a device similar to a balloon is introduced to the patient using a catheter to expand the vessel and eliminate its defect. This whole procedure is carried out using a monitor and the progress of the probe can be clearly controlled.

The difference in the amount of assistance provided

All surgical manipulations in people with heart problems can be divided both in terms of the volume and direction of the problems to be eliminated.

  1. Correction is palliative. Such surgical intervention can be attributed to auxiliary techniques. All manipulations will be aimed at bringing blood flow back to normal. This may be the end goal or preparation of the vessel for further surgical procedures. These procedures are not aimed at eliminating the existing pathology, but only eliminate its consequences and prepare the patient for full treatment.
  2. radical intervention. With such manipulations, the surgeon sets himself the goal - if possible, the complete elimination of the developed pathology.


Most common heart surgeries

People with problems of the cardiovascular system are often interested in what types of heart surgeries are and how long they last. Let's look at some of them.

RF ablation

A fairly large number of people have problems with a violation in the direction of its increase - tachycardia. In difficult situations today, cardiac surgeons offer radiofrequency ablation, or "cautery of the heart." This is a minimally invasive procedure that does not require an open heart. It is performed using X-ray surgery. The pathological part of the heart is affected by radio frequency signals, which damage it, and therefore eliminate the additional path along which the impulses pass. Normal pathways are at the same time fully preserved, and the heart rate gradually returns to normal.

Coronary artery bypass grafting

With age or due to other circumstances, atherosclerotic plaques can form in the arteries, which narrow the lumen for blood flow. Thus, the flow of blood to the heart is greatly impaired, which inevitably leads to very deplorable results. In the event that the narrowing of the lumen reaches a critical state, surgery recommends that the patient undergo coronary artery bypass grafting.

This type of surgery involves creating a bypass from the aorta to the artery using a shunt. The shunt will allow blood to bypass the narrowed area and normalize blood flow to the heart. Sometimes it is required to install not one, but several shunts at once. The operation is quite traumatic, like any other, performed at the opening of the chest and lasts a long time, up to six hours. Coronary artery bypass surgery is usually performed on the open heart, but today alternative methods are gaining more and more popularity - coronary angioplasty (insertion of an expanding balloon through a vein) and stenting.

Like the previous method, it is used to increase the lumen of the arteries. It is referred to as a minimally invasive, endovascular technique.

The essence of the method consists in introducing an inflated balloon in a special metal frame into the artery into the pathology zone, using a special catheter. The balloon inflates and opens the stent - the vessel also expands to the desired size. Next, the surgeon removes the balloon, the metal structure remains, creating a strong skeleton of the artery. Throughout the procedure, the doctor monitors the progress of the stent on the screen of the X-ray monitor.


The operation is practically painless and does not require long and special rehabilitation.

Heart valve replacement

With congenital or acquired pathology of the heart valves, the patient is often shown their prosthetics. Regardless of what type of prosthesis will be installed, surgery most often takes place on the open heart. The patient is put to sleep under general anesthesia and transferred to the cardiopulmonary bypass system. Given this, the recovery process will be long and fraught with a number of complications.

An exception to the procedure for valvular replacement is aortic valve replacement. This procedure can be performed using a gentle endovascular technique. The surgeon inserts a biological prosthesis through the femoral vein and places it in the aorta.

Operations Ross and Glenn

Often, heart surgery is performed on children who are diagnosed with congenital heart defects. Most often, operations are performed according to the methods of Ross and Glenn.

The essence of the Ross system is to replace the aortic valve with the pulmonary valve of the patient. The biggest advantage of such a replacement can be considered that there will be no threat of rejection, like any other valve taken from a donor. In addition, the annulus will grow with the child's body and can last a lifetime. But, unfortunately, an implant must be placed in place of the removed pulmonary valve. It is important that the implant at the site of the pulmonary valve lasts much longer without replacement than the same one at the site of the aortic valve.

The Glenn technique was developed for the treatment of children with pathology of the circulatory system. This is a technology that allows you to create an anastomosis to connect the right pulmonary artery and the superior vena cava, which normalizes the movement of blood flow through the systemic and pulmonary circulation.

Despite the fact that surgical intervention significantly prolongs the life of the patient and improves its quality, it is still mostly an extreme case.

Any doctor will try to do everything possible so that the treatment is conservative, but, unfortunately, sometimes this is completely impossible. It is important to understand that any surgical intervention in the work of the heart is a very difficult procedure for the patient, and it will require high-quality rehabilitation, sometimes quite lengthy.

Recovery time

Rehabilitation after heart surgery is a very important stage in the treatment of patients.

The success of the operation can only be judged after the end, which can last quite a long time. This is especially true for patients who underwent open heart surgery. Here it is extremely important to follow the recommendations of doctors as accurately as possible and have a positive attitude.

After surgery with an opening of the chest, the patient is discharged home in about a week or two. The doctor makes clear instructions for further treatment at home - it is especially important to follow them.


trip home

Already at this stage, it is important to take measures so that you do not have to go back to the hospital urgently. It is important to remember here that all movements should be as slow and smooth as possible. In the event that the road takes more than one hour, you need to periodically stop and get out of the car. This must be done to avoid stagnation of blood in the vessels.

Relations with relatives

Both relatives and the patient need to understand that people who have undergone major operations under general anesthesia are extremely prone to irritability and mood swings. These problems will pass with time, you just need to treat each other with maximum understanding.

Taking medications

This is one of the most important moments in life after heart surgery. It is important for the patient to always have all the necessary medicines with him. It is especially important not to show excessive self-activity and not to take drugs that are not prescribed. In addition, you should not stop taking medication prescribed by your doctor.

seam care

The patient should calmly perceive a temporary sensation of discomfort in the suture area. In the beginning, it can be pain, a feeling of tightness and itching. Painkillers can be prescribed by a doctor to relieve pain; special ointments or gels can be used to relieve other symptoms, but only after consulting a surgeon.

The seam should be dry, without excessive redness or swelling. This needs to be watched closely. The place of the seam must be constantly treated with brilliant green, and the first water procedures are allowed to be taken after about two weeks. Such patients are allowed only a shower, and taking a bath and sudden changes in temperature are contraindicated. It is recommended to wash the seam only with ordinary soap and gently blot with a towel.

In a situation where the patient's temperature rises sharply to 38 degrees, severe swelling appears with redness at the site of the suture, fluid is released or severe pain is disturbing, you should immediately consult a doctor.

It is important for a person who has undergone heart surgery to set a goal - maximum recovery. But the main thing here is not to rush, but to do everything gradually and very carefully.

In the first days after returning home, you need to try to do everything as smoothly and slowly as possible, gradually increasing the load. For example, in the early days, you can try to walk from one hundred to five hundred meters, but if fatigue appears, you should rest. Then the distance should be gradually increased. It is best to walk outdoors and on flat terrain. After a week of walking, you should try to climb the stairs for 1-2 flights. At the same time, you can try to do simple housework.


Approximately two months later, the cardiologist will perform a stitch healing test and give permission to increase physical activity. The patient may begin to swim or play tennis. He will be allowed to work lightly in the garden with the lifting of small weights. Another test the cardiologist should conduct in three or four months. By this time, it is desirable for the patient to restore all the basic motor activity.

Diet

This aspect of rehabilitation also needs to be paid close attention.

The first time after the operation, the patient often lacks appetite and at this time any restrictions are not very relevant. But over time, a person recovers and his desire to eat familiar foods is restored. Unfortunately, there are a number of strict restrictions that will now always have to be observed. In the diet, you will have to severely limit fatty, spicy, salty and sweet. Cardiologists advise what you can eat after heart surgery - vegetables, fruits, various cereals, fish and lean meat. It is extremely important for such people to monitor their weight, and hence the caloric content of food.

Bad habits

Patients who have undergone heart surgery, of course, are strictly prohibited from smoking and using drugs. Drinking alcohol during the rehabilitation period is also prohibited.

Life after surgery can become full and rich. After a period of rehabilitation, many patients return to life without pain, shortness of breath and, most importantly, fear.

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.