Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

London hospital pioneers groundbreaking robotic aortic valve replacement

James Fuller, 78, and London Health Sciences Centre cardiac surgery chief Dr. Bob Kiaii. London Health Sciences Centre

The London Health Sciences Centre is breaking new ground in the field of cardiac surgery.

Story continues below advertisement

For the first time ever, surgeons at University Hospital performed a robotic aortic valve replacement on a patient suffering from aortic stenosis, which is a narrowing of the aortic valve caused by calcification.

A group of surgeons from around the world came up with the criteria for who would be a good fit for the surgery, and Jim Fuller fit the bill.

“I feel good that my little part that I did could help someone else out,” he said.

Since his valve and chest cavity were both the right size, the hospital was able to use its da Vinci robot to replace the calcified valve with a new tissue one. The procedure was performed back in June.

“I’m back to doing everything that I did before,” said Fuller, 78. “Before surgery, to walk up [the stairs] was very hard to do; I would get short of breath. If I bent over, I would get dizzy, and now all of that is gone away.”

Story continues below advertisement

Dr. Bob Kiaii, cardiac surgery chief with the London Health Sciences Centre, said the robot went in between his ribs, so they didn’t have to open his chest cavity. That meant less trauma for the patient, and in turn, a quicker recovery.

“The purpose of this is to provide another alternative option for patients such as Mr. Fuller so that we can be able to provide a care in a less invasive manner with the utilization of robotic technology, [and] hopefully be able to provide a better surgery for him and to do the surgery from our point of view more accurately,” Dr. Kiaii said.

Since the surgery is minimally invasive, there’s also a lower risk of complications.

“Surgery is being looked over not only in the discipline of hearts, but all disciplines to be done less invasively,” Dr. Kiaii said, adding that it “has translated to definitely much, you could say, better recovery, potentially less complications, and also for the patients much easier to get back to their regular activities.”

Story continues below advertisement

WATCH: Can the latest in new technology help stroke patients regain their mobility?

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article