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Date :
April 2005
Dr.
Vivek Jawali attends to Siddharamiah, the world's first patent to
undergo an awake bypass surgery with valve replacement.
News
article in "Guardian Unlimited"
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Another chapter in the history of heart surgery across the world was
written in India by the Bangalore-based Wockhardt Hospital & Heart
Institute, recently.
Dr Vivek Jawali, chief cardiovascular surgeon
along with his team at Wockhardt Heart Institute have set a global
benchmark by performing the first coronary bypass surgery along with an
aortic valve replacement without using general anaesthesia or
ventilator support while the patient was on a heart lung machine.
This is the first such reported case in the world
of a twin heart surgery, the only other being a routine coronary bypass
surgery on a heart lung machine. "This patient had multifaceted medical
complications, required a bypass surgery and an aortic valve
replacement. His lung condition did not permit the use of a ventilator
and he was high risk for general anaesthesia. With his surgery being
rejected at various centres before he came to us, his best chance of
survival was an open heart surgery without general anaesthesia, in
other words, an awake heart surgery. We give him that chance using the
technique of high thoracic epidural analgesia and a new direction in
heart surgery has been unveiled," recounted Dr Jawali.
The technique of high thoracic epidural analgesia
is a highly precision based methodology which involves injection of
micro doses of local anaesthetic in the epidural space around the
spinal cord which anaesthetises only the chest region while the rest of
the system is fully awake.
This enables a painless chest surgery and makes
the surgery safe for patients who are high risk for general
anaesthesia. Besides the team at Wockhardt Heart Institute in India, Dr
Aybek in West Germany has been doing same pioneering in Europe with
this technique in heart surgery.
"Heart operations where the patient is awake
without general anaesthesia or respiratory assistance was until now
limited to beating heart bypass surgeries only. The associated valve
replacement throws open the doors of surgery for many patients (many in
their most productive years) who are termed inoperable," explained Dr
Jawali.
Dr Vivek Jawali and Dr Murali Chakravarthy, chief
cardiac anaesthetist of Wockhardt Heart Institute are the national
pioneers of awake coronary bypass surgery on beating heart through full
chest incisions and over the last two years have performed 255 awake
heart surgeries and have six international publications on this topic
in the leading journals of the world to their credit.
It was one of the most critical decisions George
Marshall faced in his life. The 73-year-old violin repairer from
Bradford, UK, suffering from severe angina (chest pain), was told by
his local doctor that he had a choice of waiting for six months for a
heart bypass operation on the National Health Service (NHS) or pay
19,000 sterling pounds for the same operation at a private hospital in
Britain.
Marshall met a fellow Briton, Ian Stanley Brown,
who had earlier undergone a coronary angioplasty by Consultant
Cardiologist Dr. Ranganath Nayak at the Wockhardt Hospital & Heart
Institute (WHHI). And after an email chat with Wockhardt Hospitals'
Vishal Bali, he took the bold decision to fly 5,000 miles to WHHI in
Bangalore.
A hale and hearty Marshall was discharged on 9th
February after a successful double bypass surgery performed by Dr.
Vivek Jawali, the hospital's chief cardiovascular surgeon.
A piece of artery was taken from Marshall's arm to bypass the blocks in
the arteries of his heart.
"Everybody's
been great here and my stay has been pretty relaxing. I have been in
the NHS and gone private in Britain in the past, but I can say that the
care and facilities in India are easily comparable," Marshall told UK
newspaper Guardian from his hospital bed after his surgery. "I'd have
had no problem coming again." It cost him only 4,800 sterling pounds,
and that included the cost of his flight from UK to India and back. He
is now back home with his family and friends.
Marshall is the latest in a list of patients from
Europe who hay, placed their trust in Wockhardt and India, and are
spreading the good work back home. Wockhardt Hospitals has shown that
innovation and excellence in science and technology are no longer the
exclusive preserve of the West.
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