Sunday Express

Heart implant will slash risk of stroke

- By Lucy Johnston HEALTH EDITOR

A REVOLUTION­ARY heart implant that reduces the risk of deadly strokes by up to 70 per cent has been launched.

The first tranche of patients have now been fitted with the lifesaving Watchman FLX, after it gained European approval.

The implant, designed in Britain, consists of a nickel titanium device inserted into the left atrial – a sac in the muscle wall of the heart – where 90 per cent of stroke-causing blood clots are formed.

The mesh-like mechanism, about the size of a 50p, acts like a sieve, trapping clots.

It is inserted through a vein, then expanded in the heart. The procedure usually takes an hour.

Studies at Mayo Clinic, in Maine, US, found Watchman FLX reduced the risk of stroke in up to 70 per cent of patients.

It offers a potentiall­y lifesaving option for a range of patients, particular­ly those who suffer atrial fibrillati­on, the most

DEVINDER SINGH, 60, was one of the first people in the country to be given the Watchman FLX implant.

He had been diagnosed with AF in 2012 after he was taken to hospital with severe chest pain.

Devinder, a solicitor and father of three from Birmingham, suffered a brain haemorrhag­e in April 2015. Doctors think it may have been linked to his blood-thinning drugs.

In February he had a stroke and doctors implanted the device. He has fully recovered from his stroke and brain bleed. He said: “I’m very lucky. It’s fantastic I can have this implant.”

common cause of irregular heartbeat affecting around one million people in the UK.

AF can cause blood to pool in the heart and then form clots. If these enter the circulator­y system they can move to the brain, block the flow of blood and cause a stroke.

At present many AF patients are prescribed blood thinning medication but that can cause potentiall­y deadly side effects

including serious bleeding in the stomach. Thinners can also raise the risk of bleeding in the brain, another cause of stroke.

Dr John Foran, a heart specialist at London’s Royal Brompton & Harefield hospitals, said: “This device could potentiall­y save thousands of patients from strokes. For people who cannot take blood thinning drugs this implant provides cover without the need for medication.”

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