Open-heart surgery Open-heart surgery is any kind of surgery in which a surgeon makes a large incision (cut) in the chest to open the rib cage and operate on the heart. "Open" refers to the chest, not necessarily the heart. Depending on the type of surgery, the surgeon also may open the heart.
Wilfred G. Bigelow of the
University of Toronto found that procedures involving opening the patient's heart could be performed better in a bloodless and motionless environment. Therefore, during such surgery, the heart is temporarily stopped, and the patient is placed on
cardiopulmonary bypass, meaning a machine pumps their blood and oxygen. Because the machine cannot function the same way as the heart, surgeons try to minimize the time a patient spends on it. in Rome Cardiopulmonary bypass was developed after surgeons realized the limitations of
hypothermia in cardiac surgery: Complex intracardiac repairs take time, and the patient needs blood flow to the body (particularly to the brain), as well as heart and lung function. In July 1952,
Forest Dodrill was the first to use a mechanical pump in a human to bypass the left side of the heart whilst allowing the patient's lungs to oxygenate the blood, in order to operate on the mitral valve. In 1953,
John Heysham Gibbon of
Jefferson Medical School in Philadelphia reported the first successful use of
extracorporeal circulation by means of an
oxygenator, but he abandoned the method after subsequent failures.
John W. Kirklin at the
Mayo Clinic was the first to use a Gibbon-type pump-oxygenator. Nazih Zuhdi performed the first total intentional hemodilution open-heart surgery on Terry Gene Nix, age 7, on 25 February 1960 at Mercy Hospital in Oklahoma City. The operation was a success; however, Nix died three years later. In March 1961, Zuhdi, Carey, and Greer performed open-heart surgery on a child, aged , using the total intentional hemodilution machine.
Modern beating-heart surgery In the early 1990s, surgeons began to perform
off-pump coronary artery bypass, done without cardiopulmonary bypass. In these operations, the heart continues beating during surgery, but is stabilized to provide an almost still work area in which to connect a conduit vessel that bypasses a blockage. The conduit vessel that is often used is the saphenous vein. This vein is harvested using a technique known as
endoscopic vein harvesting (EVH).
Heart transplant In 1945, the Soviet pathologist Nikolai Sinitsyn successfully transplanted a heart from one frog to another frog and from one dog to another dog.
Norman Shumway is widely regarded as the father of human
heart transplantation, although the world's first adult heart transplant was performed by a
South African cardiac surgeon,
Christiaan Barnard, using techniques developed by Shumway and
Richard Lower. Barnard performed the first transplant on
Louis Washkansky on 3 December 1967 at
Groote Schuur Hospital in
Cape Town.
Adrian Kantrowitz performed the first pediatric heart transplant on 6 December 1967 at Maimonides Hospital (now
Maimonides Medical Center) in Brooklyn, New York, barely three days later. Arteries are typically harvested from the chest, arm, or wrist and then attached to a portion of the coronary artery, relieving pressure and limiting
clotting factors in that area of the heart. The procedure is typically performed because of
coronary artery disease (CAD), in which a plaque-like substance builds up in the coronary artery, the main pathway carrying oxygen-rich blood to the heart. This can cause a blockage and/or a rupture, which can lead to a
heart attack. Recently, minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting demonstrated excellent outcomes and appears to be a safe method in well-selected patients with multivessel coronary artery disease. In
robot-assisted heart surgery, a machine controlled by a cardiac surgeon is used to perform a procedure. The main advantage to this is the size of the incision required: three small port holes instead of an incision big enough for the surgeon's hands. The use of robotics in heart surgery continues to be evaluated, but early research has shown it to be a safe alternative to traditional techniques. ==Post-surgical procedures==