Khaleej Times

UAE surgeons do rarest heart surgery

- Jasmine Al Kuttab

abu dhabi — The heart of a 22-year-old patient was stopped for 70 minutes at an Abu Dhabi hospital recently, as doctors conducted one of the world’s rarest heart surgeries for the first time in the UAE. The four-hour long, high-risk operation saw surgeons replace the four valves in the patient’s heart.

Speaking to Khaleej Times, Dr Rakesh Suri, CEO of Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi (where the surgery was performed), said the patient — who was near death — was suffering from acute infective endocardit­is caused by an infected tooth. “When I went to see the patient before the surgery, I was so struck by the fact that he was so near to death and really had no options. It became a moral obligation to get him to the operating table as quickly as possible.”

jasmine@khaleejtim­es.com 4 heart valves replaced in rare surgery in UAE

abu dhabi — Doctors in Abu Dhabi have conducted one of the world’s rarest heart surgeries, which has only been performed on less than 20 people worldwide.

The high-risk, four-hour long quadruple valve replacemen­t surgery, in which the patient’s heart valves were replaced with tissue valves, meant that the 22-year-old man’s heart had to be stopped for 70 minutes on the operation table.

Surgeons replaced all four heart valves in the patient, who was suffering from acute infective endocardit­is, that was caused by an infected tooth.

Dr Rakesh Suri, CEO of Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, told Khaleej

Times that the patient was literally hours away from his death.

“When I went to see the patient before the surgery, I was so struck by the fact that he was so near to death and really had no options — that it became a moral obligation to get him to the operating table as quickly as possible.”

Dr Suri pointed out that infections in native heart valves are extraordin­arily rare. Moreover, he stressed that the patient arrived at a very late and critical stage.

“All the four valves were badly infected, destroyed, and his heart was incapable of supporting the organs in the body, because it wasn’t able to generate enough forward pumping of blood to support life.”

Dr Suri said that this was the first time the operation took place in the UAE.

“In terms of medical literature worldwide, this is extraordin­arily rare.”

He explained that infective endocardit­is is caused when bacteria enters a patient’s blood stream via a remote infection and attaches to the heart valves.

While rare, the infection can be caused by something as simple as having teeth cleaned or by a tooth abscess. The patient, who became sick in December last year after having an infected tooth removed, had his condition quickly deteriorat­e.

However, doctors in Dubai initially diagnosed the man with pneumonia.

Meanwhile, the patient’s infection rapidly spread throughout his body, attaching itself to all four heart valves and severely damaging them. In January, he was transferre­d to Cleveland Clinic Abu

When I went to see the patient before the surgery, I was so struck by the fact that he was so near to death and really had no options.” Dr Rakesh Suri, CEO, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi

Dhabi, where a multidisci­plinary team proceeded with the surgery, despite the low survival rate.

“We studied his condition among a multidisci­plinary team and told him that this was a highrisk operation,” said Dr Gurjyot Bajwa, staff physician in cardiac surgery in the hospital’s Heart and Vascular Institute.

“However, without it, he would not have survived.”

During the open-heart surgery, the patient was placed on a heartlung bypass machine and his heart was stopped for 70 minutes.

“We began with the valves on the left side of the heart: The aortic and mitral valves. We quickly removed them and replaced them with the tissue valves.”

Doctors then replaced the pulmonary valve, on the right side of the heart, and then moved on to the final valve, the tricuspid.

“It was a time critical, efficientl­y run operation — and that was the key to getting him off the table alive.”

Dr Suri said that despite the risky operation, the patient has recovered quickly, and once his heart healed, it was his other organ systems and strength that he required recovery from.

“To see him smiling for the first time, was profoundly impactful.”

“By the time he was ready to leave, we were all in tears and imagining the life he would lead — a life he almost didn’t have the chance of participat­ing in,” added the CEO.

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