The increasing number of patients awaiting heart transplant and the shortage of donors led to the development of a variety of left ventricular assist devices (LVAD). We analyse our experience in order to evaluate the efficacy of LVAD as bridge to transplant and the feasibility of permanent implantation. The data are drawn from our experience on 50 patients, implanted with the Novacor LVAD and from a limited series of 4 patients implanted with a Lion Heart totally implantable permanent LVAD. Seventeen patients died on the device, 32 underwent heart transplant (9 died after transplant) and one is still on device. The causes of death were mostly related to cerebrovascular events or multi-organ failure. Cardiac output, wedge pressure, pulmonary...
Mechanical circulatory support is the most rapidly evolving strategy in heart failure management. Th...
We evaluated our single-centre clinical experience with the HeartMate II (HM II) left ventricular as...
Background: Heart transplantation remains the definitive therapy for patients with advanced heart fa...
BACKGROUND: Because of the limited supply of donor hearts, prospective recipients continue to die wh...
Objective: To study the achievability of device weaning in patients receiving left ventricular assis...
Recent outstanding clinical advances with new mechanical circulatory systems (MCS) have led to addit...
Recent outstanding clinical advances with new mechanical circulatory systems have led to additional ...
The field of cardiac mechanical assist devices hasachieved a number of striking technical breakthrou...
In patients with refractory end-stage heart failure, cardiac transplantation remains the only establ...
AbstractObjectivesWe sought to determine the survival experiences of patients bridged to heart trans...
Objective: Arti®cial heart devices have suffered from a negative press based on the early Jarvik exp...
In patients with end-stage heart failure, advanced therapies such as heart transplantation and long-...
In 1963, Dr Michael DeBakey successfully implanted the first left ventricular assist device. Through...
AbstractBackground: Implantable left ventricular assist devices are common as a bridge to transplant...
In this article, we present our experience with left ventricular assist device implantation
Mechanical circulatory support is the most rapidly evolving strategy in heart failure management. Th...
We evaluated our single-centre clinical experience with the HeartMate II (HM II) left ventricular as...
Background: Heart transplantation remains the definitive therapy for patients with advanced heart fa...
BACKGROUND: Because of the limited supply of donor hearts, prospective recipients continue to die wh...
Objective: To study the achievability of device weaning in patients receiving left ventricular assis...
Recent outstanding clinical advances with new mechanical circulatory systems (MCS) have led to addit...
Recent outstanding clinical advances with new mechanical circulatory systems have led to additional ...
The field of cardiac mechanical assist devices hasachieved a number of striking technical breakthrou...
In patients with refractory end-stage heart failure, cardiac transplantation remains the only establ...
AbstractObjectivesWe sought to determine the survival experiences of patients bridged to heart trans...
Objective: Arti®cial heart devices have suffered from a negative press based on the early Jarvik exp...
In patients with end-stage heart failure, advanced therapies such as heart transplantation and long-...
In 1963, Dr Michael DeBakey successfully implanted the first left ventricular assist device. Through...
AbstractBackground: Implantable left ventricular assist devices are common as a bridge to transplant...
In this article, we present our experience with left ventricular assist device implantation
Mechanical circulatory support is the most rapidly evolving strategy in heart failure management. Th...
We evaluated our single-centre clinical experience with the HeartMate II (HM II) left ventricular as...
Background: Heart transplantation remains the definitive therapy for patients with advanced heart fa...