Vanderbilt Heart Transplant Program Vanderbilt University Medical Center s history of pioneering advances in heart transplantation has made it the region s premier heart transplant center. http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/transplant/heart.htm
Extractions: Debra A. Dodd, M.D. (Medical Director) (Pediatric) Vanderbilt University Medical Center's history of pioneering advances in heart transplantation has made it the region's premier heart transplant center. Vanderbilt's first heart transplant was performed in April 1985. The Vanderbilt Transplant Center performed Tennessee's first pediatric heart transplant. Vanderbilt's Heart Transplant Program was also the first program in Tennessee to perform heart transplant in infants for hypoplastic left heart syndrome. The success of the heart transplants at Vanderbilt is a testament to the success of the collaborative, multi-disciplinary approach to transplant science supported by the Vanderbilt Transplant Center. Under the direction of Dr. Davis C. Drinkwater, Surgical Director, Dr. Stacy F. Davis, Medical Director for Adult Transplantation, and Dr. Debra A. Dodd, Medical Director for Pediatric Transplantation, the Heart Transplant Program functions as a multidisciplinary team, bringing to bear the skills of cardiology, pulmonology, nephrology, nursing, infectious disease, pathology, social work, nutrition, ethics, psychiatry, rehabilitation medicine and surgery to address the needs of patients with end-stage cardiopulmonary disease. The program consists of adult heart transplantation, adult alternate recipient program (for age >65), pediatric heart transplantation and mechanical circulatory support. The results for each program continue to equal or surpass national and international outcome benchmarks.
My Transplant Well, that was just a little over 11 years ago. I was the 38th heart transplant done at UCLA I don t know how many they have done since. http://www.pe.net/~terbob1/tx.html
Extractions: My purpose here is to make people aware of the desperate shortage of ORGAN DONORS. I had my first heart attack at age 35 and it was a doozy. Myocardial infarction, they called it...massive, they said. Total arrest in the ER, twice in half an hour, they said. I have to take their word for it, I don't remember a thing. That was in November, 1981. Oh yeah, did I mention I was going through a divorce at the same time? MAJOR BUMMER! In May, 1983, I had my 2nd myocardial infarction (I hate that word). In June I had bypass surgery and felt pretty good for 3 years, even continued to work. By early fall of 1986 I was really sick and they told me "congestive heart failure, nothing we can do. Take it easy and think about a transplant." Christmas Eve, 1986... My cardiologist puts me in the hospital and they transfer me to UCLA Medical Center the day after Christmas. "You have perhaps 6 months, Mr. Fowler, we will do our best to get you a new heart." Now..I knew that people had to wait months, even years, before a donor might be found...I wasn't feeling very hopeful. So, I started looking back at my life and I wasn't very pleased with what I saw. And I knew, that if I got lucky and lived through this, I
Heart Transplant Story Personal account of a heart transplant in 1997, before, during and after the procedure. http://www.geocities.com/ehtlibahunt/transplant.html
Extractions: My heart problems began with rheumatic fever at age 10. I seemed to recover ok but was left with a murmur. I had my first heart cath in 1967. It was quite a big deal then, including 5 days in the hospital; things sure have changed over the years! I found out in the mid '70s (by reading an unattended file, not by being directly told) that I had Cardiomyopathy. I slowly deteriorated through the 1970s and '80s and got much worse about 1990. I couldn't breathe lying down, stairs were a major effort that had to be planned for, constantly nauseous and exhausted, and I got hauled out of work once on a stretcher. My weight dropped from 242 to 165. Then I also went into atrial fribulation in 1992.
A To Z Encyclopedia Topic: Heart Transplant heart transplant. heart transplant. What is a heart transplant? A heart transplant person. Why is a heart transplant recommended? A heart http://web1.tch.harvard.edu/cfapps/A2ZtopicDisplay.cfm?Topic=Heart Transplant
HealthCentral - General Encyclopedia - Heart Transplant General Health Encyclopedia, heart transplant. Indications A heart transplant may be recommended for Heart failure caused by coronary artery disease; http://www.healthcentral.com/mhc/top/003003.cfm
Extractions: TOPIC CENTERS Choose a topic Acne Alcohol Allergies Alternative Medicine Alzheimer's Anemia Arthritis Asthma Baby and Toddler Health Back Care Bipolar Disorder Birth Control Bodywork and Mind/Body Bowel Breast Cancer Cancer Overview Caregiving Chemotherapy Children's Health Cholesterol Circumcision Colds and Flus Colon Cancer Cosmetic Surgery Crohn's Disease Dental Depression Diabetes Diet Drugs Digestion Disabilities Drugs and Medications Eating Disorders Eczema Erectile Dysfunction Eye and Vision Fitness Foot Care GERD/Heartburn Hair Loss Hearing Heart and Circulation Hepatitis Herbs Herpes High Blood Pressure HIV and AIDS Home Remedies Hyperactivity and ADD Immunizations/Vaccines Impotence Incontinence/Bladder Infertility Leukemia Lung Cancer Medical Breakthroughs Medical Expenses Medical Marijuana Men's Health Menopause Mental Health Migraines and Headaches Multiple Sclerosis Nutraceuticals Nutrition and Healthy Eating Osteoporosis Pain Management Parenting Parkinson's Pregnancy and Childbirth Prostate Cancer Prostate Disorders Psoriasis Rheumatoid Arthritis Safety and First Aid Schizophrenia Senior Health Sex and Relationships Sexual Health Skin and Hair Sleep Disorders Smoking Stress Reduction Stroke Substance Abuse and Addiction Teen Health Thyroid Disorders Travel Health Vitamins and Supplements Weight Loss Women's Health Women's Reproductive Cancers Yeast Infection Yoga Search Tips
Heart Transplantation, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Return to Top. How a heart transplant is performed. Potential heart transplant recipients are usually identified by their surgeon or cardiologist. http://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/health/heart-encyclopedia/treat/surg/transpla
Extractions: Home Contact Us Site Map Go to Advanced Search ... Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) Heart Transplantation Open-Heart Surgery Palliative Care / Procedures Respiratory Care Interventional Cardiac Catheterization ... Contact Us Information for Families of Pediatric Patients and Adults Explanation Indications The Procedure Risks and Complications ... Patient Stories Orthotopic cardiac transplantation is the process of explanting (removing) a person's failing heart and replacing it with a suitable donor heart from a person who has been declared clinically brain dead. Return to Top Heart transplantation is used as a last resort for people with end-stage heart disease who have no other surgical or medical therapy available. Generally, people listed for heart transplantation have a life expectancy of less than one year, and often much less. In addition, candidates often have significant limitations of their activity and lifestyle prior to transplantation. The goal of heart transplantation is to return the patient to as functional a state as possible with the least amount of limitations and best quality of life.
Heart Transplant Information Includes a heart transplant operation, heart biopsy, tests and personal accounts. http://www.superscreens.co.uk
Adult Heart Transplant Program - Inova Health System inova, heart transplant. Adult heart transplant Program. We recognize that the prospect of having a heart transplant can be both intimidating http://www.inova.org/inovapublic.srt/transplant/heart/index.jsp
Extractions: program and relevant updates Clinical trials and studies currently underway. Our resources will direct you to related sites. The Delaware Valleys Premier Heart Program The Temple Cardiomyopathy and Cardiac Transplant Center stands at the forefront of comprehensive care for patients with end-stage cardiomyopathy. Temple has performed over 800 heart transplants and is one of the busiest adult heart transplant centers in the United States. Search Feedback
Extractions: inova We recognize that the prospect of having a heart transplant can be both intimidating and overwhelming; not only for patients, but also for their loved ones. Our site is designed to provide you with an overview of our heart transplant program, as well as various aspects of transplantation. If you have suggestions to enhance our site, please feel free to contact us at transplant.center@inova.com, or at . Members of the transplant team are available to speak with referring physicians 24 hours a day, seven days a week, through the center's patient referral numbers: or During the last decade, with the introduction of new immunosuppressive drugs and the development of improved surgical techniques, heart transplantation remains a widely accepted therapy for patients with end-stage heart disease. The Inova Transplant Center has been a pioneer in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area, establishing its Heart Transplant Program in 1986, when it recognized a growing need for a center of excellence in lung transplantation. The program is responsible for the area's first heart transplant in 1986 and has launched many other programs, including the ventricular assist device and lung transplant programs.
Directory Lung Transplant. heart transplant. heart transplant Faculty. The CU heart transplant Team at University Hospital continues to track these patients indefinitely. http://www.uchsc.edu/sm/surgery/transheart.html
Extractions: Heart Transplantation Liver Transplant Kidney Transplant Pancreas Transplant Lung Transplant ... Department of Surgery Home Page The University of Colorado's Adult Heart Transplant Program has been in existence since 1986 and is the only Medicare-certified heart transplant program in Colorado. This program achieved patient and graft survival rates in the top percentiles nationwide with over 200 patients transplanted. A multi-disciplinary approach is used for patient management in all phases of care from the selection phase through post-operative follow-up. Pre-operative care is delivered by the transplant cardiologists in the Heart Failure Clinic at University of Colorado Hospital. Care is coordinated through the patient's referring physician and communication is maintained with the referring physicians on each visit. The transplant coordinators, transplant cardiologists, social worker and transplant financial coordinator are always available to patients during their visits to clinic or during their hospital stay. Patients waiting for a transplant are provided educational assistance in preparing for their transplant and are accessible 24 hours a day in the event they need to be contacted immediately. Patient selection for cardiac transplantation at University Hospital is based on both critical medical need for the transplantation and the likelihood of a successful outcome. Critical need for cardiac transplantation is defined as a life expectancy of less than 12 months due to cardiac disease with no reasonable possibility of improvement with medical or surgical therapy. Likely success is predicted by a lack of absolute contraindications and absent or few relative contraindications.
Handbook Of Texas Online: HEART TRANSPLANTS format this article to print. heart transplantS. Cooley and his associates performed the first heart transplant in the United States on May 3, 1968, at St. http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/HH/sdh1.html
Extractions: format this article to print HEART TRANSPLANTS Heart transplantation is no longer an experimental procedure but rather a highly effective therapy for the treatment of end-stage heart disease. According to the United Network for Organ Sharing, a total of 26,704 heart transplantations have been reported worldwide, and 1,804 of these were performed in Texas. It is estimated that as many as 15,000 people per year could benefit from a heart transplant, but the actual number of recipients is constrained by the donor supply. Worldwide, just over 3,000 heart transplants are performed each year. In 1994 167 of these were in Texas. In September 1994 the rival institutions in Houston announced a change of heart. Methodist Hospital of Houston qv and St. Luke's signed a letter of intent to merge the two world-renowned heart-transplantation centers. In 1995 O. H. Frazier, the chief of cardiopulmonary transplantation and codirector of the Cullen Cardiovascular Research Laboratories at the Texas Heart Institute, continued work in both heart transplantation and artificial heart research. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Roger W. Evans et al., "Donor Availability as the Primary Determinant of the Future of Heart Transplantation,"
Extractions: The Hubble Space Telescope appears to have survived a tricky spacewalk operation to fit a new power control unit. "Hubble has a heartbeat," Nasa spokesman Rob Navias said after astronauts from the Columbia space shuttle fitted the new component and mission controllers turned the power back on. The spacewalkers had to work quickly so that Hubble's power could be turned back on before it was damaged by the extreme cold of space. Signs of weakness had been detected in the existing power unit. The new one is to last until the telescope is taken out of service in 2010. Element of risk There was no guarantee that the power would come back on once the unit was installed - although Nasa was always confident it would. Astronauts John Grunsfeld and Richard Linnehan took about four hours to remove the old power unit and fit the new one. It was a tricky job, delayed by a leak in Grunsfeld's spacesuit and involving 36 connections in cramped conditions.
Organ Transplant Lung pioneer James Hardy attempted a human heart transplant in 1964, but a premature failure of the recipient s heart caught Hardy with no human donor, he used http://www.fact-index.com/o/or/organ_transplant.html
Extractions: Main Page See live article Alphabetical index An organ transplant is the transplantation of an organ (or part of one) from one body to another, for the purpose of replacing the recipient's damaged or failing organ with a working one from the donor. Blood transfusion and bone marrow transplants are special cases of a transplant where the transplanted part of the body is renewable; in other cases, the organ donor either has another of the same organ (such as lungs or kidneys ), or has been declared brain dead Organs that can currently be transplanted include: The heart and lungs are sometimes transplanted together, in a heart-lung transplant. Organ transplants that can not be performed today include Successful inter-human transplants have a relatively long history, the operative skills were present long before the necessities for post-operative survival were discovered. Rejection was, is, and may always be the key problem. The third century saints Damian and Cosmas are recorded as performing the first medical transplant - replacing the gangrenous leg of a white man with the leg of a dead Moor. Less miraculous was the work of French surgeon
Extractions: Languages Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW NICOSIA, Cyprus (CNN) Heart transplant pioneer Dr. Christiaan Barnard died Sunday. Barnard, 78, died in his hotel room in the southwest coastal town of Paphos, said Dr. Maro Svana, a spokeswoman for Paphos General Hospital. He was taken from the hotel in an ambulance to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 1 a.m. (6 p.m. Saturday EDT), she said. An autopsy will be performed Monday. In a five-hour operation at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town in 1967, Barnard replaced the diseased heart of Louis Washkansky with that of a woman in her mid-20s who had died in a car accident. Washkansky died 18 days later of double pneumonia, the result of his suppressed immune system. But the surgery represented a milestone, and propelled the South Africa surgeon, then 45, to acclaim. "On Saturday, I was a surgeon in South Africa, very little known," he recalled years later to a documentary producer. "On Monday, I was world renowned."
Chucky Gets Lucky The first human heart transplant was performed in 1967 by the late South African surgeon Christian Barnard. But transplants remain http://whyfiles.org/142heart_transplant/
Extractions: 1. Chucky gets lucky 2. On bypass 3. New heart pumping 4. Recovery ... 5. The long run Chuck Reynolds waited more than three patient months for a heart transplant. A nurse himself, he was notorious for kidding the staff, but the wait was long and worrisome. *Photojournalism by David Tenenbaum (Unless noted otherwise, all photos, this feature, courtesy David Tenenbaum). Huge and misshapen, this heart is about to get replaced. That electronic gadget is a pacemaker and the wires connecting to the old heart. Beating death POSTED 18 OCT 2001 On Sept. 14, the National Day of Remembrance for victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, Chucky finally got lucky. James (Chuck) Reynolds, 54, had been waiting in the hospital for three and one-half months for a heart. In other words, he was waiting for a generous stranger to die. A stranger with the correct blood type and a heart suited to Reynolds's large chest. Otherwise, Thomas Starkey, his heart surgeon at University of Wisconsin-Madison Hospital, had told him he would die of heart failure. In fact, Reynolds was already rather far along in the process of retiring from life. A registered nurse from the hills of southwest Wisconsin, his failing heart prevented him from working, even caring for his three young boys.
Second Chances: Receiving The Gift Of Life Inspirational stories about donor families and liver, kidney, and heart transplant recipients. Detailed medical information about the heart transplant surgery itself and also the process for getting listed for a heart transplant. http://home.fuse.net/secondchances
Extractions: Almost 12 years ago I received the gift of life, a heart transplant. My donor, Brandon, was only 15, riding his bike home when he was tragically hit and killed by a car. That's him on the cover in his football uniform. During my illness and wait for an organ, I lost faith in God but He never gave up on me. My accomplishments and zeal for life since my transplant completing graduate school, getting married, writing this book, all while working full-time as public affairs manager for LifeCenter, the local organ recovery agency in Cincinnati. Other Transplant Recipient Friends Read about others who have received heart, liver, kidney, and kidney/pancreas transplants as well as a young burn patient who received donated skin. People like Patty Britton, a young woman who has survived 3 liver transplants. Who, in an ironic turn of events, also became a donor mother when her newborn baby Christopher lost his fight for life. A physician at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center and Childrens Hospital of Cincinnati, Dr. Ed Lowe, became a patient when he needed a heart transplant. Paul Hackman, though diabetes had robbed him of his sight and one leg, how he triumphed to carry the Olympic torch through Cincinnati and donate his time to lecture at high schools about organ and tissue donation.
Heart Transplant Program Healthcare Services, heart transplant Program. For more than 25 years, people with endstage heart disease have been receiving heart http://careconnection.osu.edu/hospitalsandservices/services/?ID=89&SIDS=9&o=0