WJHG - Medical Minute - Headlines

World's Smallest Heart Pump Available in Bay County

Print
Updated: Tue 8:59 AM, Apr 26, 2011

Panama City -- Interventional cardiologists have a new tool that can help them treat patients that otherwise would not have been candidates for open heart surgery: It's a tiny, catheter-based heart pump.

Dr. Samil Patel says "Before this device, patients would be managed medically or they would succumb to the high risk of doing multiple stents.

The tiny Impella maintains a consistent blood flow while surgeons work to open blockages or treat other heart issues.

With this device doctors are able to provide more support, decrease the risk for having a heart attack or a stroke during the procedure -- that will help them recover quickly.

It's called the Impella 2.5 because it's capable of pumping 2.5 liters of blood per minute to support the heart during high risk procedures.

Dr. Amir Haghighat says, "It's minimally invasive, so it's done through holes in the femoral artery which are right at the groin site that are minuscule. There's no cutting of the chest or anything dramatic involved."

It's inserted through the left ventricle of the heart and there's an inlet and outlet area. The inlet is borderized and allows blood to be suctioned through the left ventricle of the heart and goes through the catheter in the outlet area through the ascending aorta.

The world's smallest heart pump is about the size of a number two pencil eraser.

Dr. Haghighat adds "What this device really allows us is to give an extra level of insurance and comfort level as we do these high risk procedures that in case the heart goes into flatline, that the heart is still able to pump out blood and get blood to the vital organs like the brain and the kidneys and the heart arteries, so the patient may not even feel it."

Local doctors performed the first local surgery using the Impella in March 2011. They have two scheduled this week.


Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
powered by Disqus

Medical News

  • Don't look for emergency contraception soon
    The Obama administration may have backed down after a decade of fighting over emergency contraception, but don’t expect to see Plan B, or any other morning-after birth control product, out from behind the counter anytime soon.
  • Second child files suit for lung transplant, gets on list

    A woman whose son died of cystic fibrosis in 2009 successfully sued on Thursday to get his younger brother, now 11, on the adult waiting list for a lung transplant.A woman whose son died of cystic fibrosis in 2009 successfully sued on Thursday to get his younger brother, now 11, on the adult waiting list for a lung transplant.


  • Sebelius won't intervene in girl's transplant case

    U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius reiterated Tuesday that she won’t intervene in the “incredibly agonizing” case involving a 10-year-old Pennsylvania girl who is waiting for a lung transplant, telling members of Congress that medical experts should make those decisions.U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius reiterated Tuesday that she won’t intervene in the “incredibly agonizing” case involving a 10-year-old Pennsylvania girl who is waiting for a lung transplant, telling members of Congress that medical experts should make those decisions.


  • Insurers pick up $147 million medical tab for young adults

    One of the first provisions of the 2010 health reform law has had its intended effect: shifting costs from hospitals, taxpayers and families to health insurance companies, researchers reported on Thursday. It’s one of the most popular aspects of the law.One of the first provisions of the 2010 health reform law has had its intended effect: shifting costs from hospitals, taxpayers and families to health insurance companies, researchers reported on Thursday. It’s one of the most popular aspects of the law.


  • Health workers strike at UC Calif. medical centers
    Thousands of healthcare workers walked off the job at the University of California's five medical centers on Tuesday, delaying surgeries, diagnostic procedures, treatments and emergency care throughout the state.
  • Probiotics can prevent dangerous diarrhea

    Probiotics — those products that promise to replenish your gut’s 'healthy' microbes — do seem to help prevent dangerous diarrhea, researchers reported on Thursday.Probiotics — those products that promise to replenish your gut’s 'healthy' microbes — do seem to help prevent dangerous diarrhea, researchers reported on Thursday.


  • People think they're eating less than they are

    People may realize that fast food isn’t health food, but they don’t realize just how fattening it really is, researchers report. They surveyed people eating at 10 burger, chicken, sandwich and doughnut chains and found they greatly underestimated just how much they were chowing down.People may realize that fast food isn’t health food, but they don’t realize just how fattening it really is, researchers report. They surveyed people eating at 10 burger, chicken, sandwich and doughnut chains and found they greatly underestimated just how much they were chowing down.


  • Report questioning salt guidelines riles heart experts
    An unusual medical brawl erupted on Tuesday when the influential Institute of Medicine issued a report questioning the basis of years of advice for Americans to cut their salt intake in half.
  • Chris Christie's weight-loss procedure doesn't always work

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.


  • Caffeinated gum raises health buzz

    A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.


  • Don't pull Avandia from market, FDA panel urges
    The controversial diabetes drug Avandia should stay on the market for now, with relaxed restrictions on its use, Food and Drug Administration advisers said on Thursday. Avandia was the world’s No. 1 diabetes drug until research showed in could raise heart risks.
  • Anger may raise heart attack risk, study finds
    Bottling up emotions is thought to harm both mind and body, but a new study suggests that the opposite extreme may be no better.
  • Just one daily soda can raise diabetes risk
    Drinking just one 12-ounce soda a day may increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes, a new study from Europe suggests.
  • Gut bugs linked to heart attacks, strokes
    Thousands of heart attack victims every year have none of the notorious risk factors before their crisis - not high cholesterol, not unhealthy triglycerides.
  • 12 school football players die each year, study finds
    Each year in the U.S. an average of a dozen high school and college football players die during practices and games, according to a new study that finds heart conditions, heat and other non-traumatic causes of death are twice as common as injury-related ones.
8195 Front Beach Road Panama City Beach, FL 32407 Station: 850-234-7777 News: 850-230-5221 Fax: 850-233-6647
Gray Television, Inc. - Copyright © 2002-2013 - Designed by Gray Digital Media - Powered by Clickability
User Agent: CCBot/2.0 - 120671579