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Unique Aortic Valve Replacement for Younger Patients- Avoids Need for Blood Thinners and Repeat Valve Replacements
See the Ross Procedure - An Aortic Valve Replacement from Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City
Live Webcast: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 11:00 am EDT
New York, NY- Each year several thousand Americans under the age of 50 learn that they have a narrowed or leaky aortic valve. As the condition progresses, it can result in shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness, or loss of consciousness. The typical surgical solution is an aortic valve replacement, which involves replacing the diseased valve with either a mechanical or animal valve. Neither solution is ideal for children or young adults. The mechanical valve requires blood-thinning medications, which pose a bleeding risk for active people. The animal valve solution will only last 12 to 15 years, requiring younger patients to undergo repeat valve operations.
The Ross Procedure is a lesser-known surgery that allows the patient to avoid the need to take blood thinner medications or have a repeat valve replacement surgery. With the Ross Procedure, surgeons use the patient's own pulmonary valve to replace the damaged aortic valve. Then surgeons replace the patient's pulmonary valve with one from a human donor.
See Beth Israel Medical Center surgeons perform the Ross Procedure in a live webcast on October 26 at 11:00 am.
Cardiothoracic surgeon Paul Stelzer, MD will perform the procedure. He completed his residency training in 1981 and has been at Beth Israel since 1996. Dr. Stelzer has done over 370 of these operations and currently performs the Ross Procedure more than anyone else in the world. In fact, there are currently only approximately 50 "busy" Ross Procedure surgeons in the entire United States. Robert F. Tranbaugh, MD, chief of cardiac surgery at Beth Israel, will explain the procedure and provide background information during the Webcast.
Unique Aortic Valve Replacement for Younger Patients- Avoids Need for Blood Thinners and Repeat Valve Replacements
See the Ross Procedure - An Aortic Valve Replacement from Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City
Live Webcast: Tuesday, October 26, 2004 11:00 am EDT
New York, NY- Each year several thousand Americans under the age of 50 learn that they have a narrowed or leaky aortic valve. As the condition progresses, it can result in shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness, or loss of consciousness. The typical surgical solution is an aortic valve replacement, which involves replacing the diseased valve with either a mechanical or animal valve. Neither solution is ideal for children or young adults. The mechanical valve requires blood-thinning medications, which pose a bleeding risk for active people. The animal valve solution will only last 12 to 15 years, requiring younger patients to undergo repeat valve operations.
The Ross Procedure is a lesser-known surgery that allows the patient to avoid the need to take blood thinner medications or have a repeat valve replacement surgery. With the Ross Procedure, surgeons use the patient's own pulmonary valve to replace the damaged aortic valve. Then surgeons replace the patient's pulmonary valve with one from a human donor.
See Beth Israel Medical Center surgeons perform the Ross Procedure in a live webcast on October 26 at 11:00 am.
Cardiothoracic surgeon Paul Stelzer, MD will perform the procedure. He completed his residency training in 1981 and has been at Beth Israel since 1996. Dr. Stelzer has done over 370 of these operations and currently performs the Ross Procedure more than anyone else in the world. In fact, there are currently only approximately 50 "busy" Ross Procedure surgeons in the entire United States. Robert F. Tranbaugh, MD, chief of cardiac surgery at Beth Israel, will explain the procedure and provide background information during the Webcast.