What is your rob on this Bit of News.?

By Peter Rakobowchuk

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MONTREAL (CP) - A 65-year-old Quebec man who received a new long-term power-driven heart last month is human being described as the only living Canadian lacking a pulse.


Dr. Renzo Cecere implanted the "Heartmate II" mechanical heart into Gerard Langevin within an three-hour operation Nov. 23. Officials at the McGill University Health Centre say the device, which is going on for the size of a flashlight battery, could ending up to 10 years. That is longer than other models which are thought to be good for solely two or three years.


The new powered heart, which is powered by batteries located within pouches on Langevin's body, provides a continuous flow of blood so the patient have no pulse.


"Mr. Langevin happens to be the merely individual currently living in Canada in need a pulse and without a measurable blood pressure," Cecere said Wednesday.


Langevin admit to reporters that, before the operation, he feel his time was up after he suffered his second heart attack contained by July.


He had the other surrounded by 2002.


"I was finished. . . I have no time left. . . I probably have only a few months not here to live," Langevin said.


He admitted he be afraid and hesitant something like having the shoot.


"My wife pushed me a lot to hold the operation and I don't regret it."


Langevin, who comes from Coteau-du-Lac, southwest of Montreal, added it was "better than staying out for the count."


Dr. Nadia Giannetti, director of the MUHC's heart transplant program, said Langevin be deemed an unsuitable entrant for a heart transplant because of other medical conditions.


"Previously, we would have have little to offer and his heart would enjoy continued to deteriorate," she said.


Giannetti said the entire procedure cost $100,000, with the tab self picked up by the hospital foundation.


The "Heartmate II" is currently part of a clinical trial at several hospitals contained by Canada and the United States.


Only one other Canadian hospital-the Toronto General Hospital-was invited to take quantity in the study.


The device have yet to be approved for use surrounded by either country.


Doctors say Langevin is well adequate to be released from hospital in the coming days.

Answer:
That's not too surprising considering that's what we do when we put culture on bypass machines for their open heart surgeries. What's amazing is that they manage to make it a small plenty device that will fit into a man's chest.

On a side note: it's be established that a pulsatile blood blow, like that provided by a colloquial heart, is better than the continuous flow provided by the bypass machines. People on bypass have a better risk of strokes, heart attacks, kidney/liver damamge, etc... There seems to be something roughly speaking that pulsatile blood flow that's superior to any man made device we can come up with. It'll be interesting to see the long-term outcome for this man.
We live contained by amazing age.
God is great. Once he mades up his mind and wants you to live more, he'll put the method in your track.
Wow! Could a human brain be next next to artificial
nerves and emotionlessness and be the smartest person within the world.
that was nice, but we don't come here to read the report, we come to answer questions.
very soon that is amazing. does anyone know how they correct the batteries beside out killing him? it sounds approaching a pretty scarey thing
I wonder how the arterial muscles are artificial by this, after all, they're used to the pressure, and I would infer over time they would atrophy, and collapse.

I'm sure these doctors have thought of that, it's basically my initial reaction.
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