TWO beating hearts after successful transplant operation
A man was left with two beating hearts after surgeons performed a rare “piggyback” operation in a last-ditch attempt to save his life.
The 56 year-old Indian patient was meant to have a standard transplant operation but the doctors quickly realised the donor organ was too small.
Cardiothoracic surgeon A Gopala Krishna Gokhale turned to “Plan B” and connected the healthy heart to the old failing organ during a seven-hour operation at Apollo Hospital in Hyderabad last week.
His normal second heart, which is fist-sized, now sits between the right lung and the original heart, described as “the size of a small football”.
“Two hearts in the patient complement each other to facilitate circulation, but beat at different rates,” Dr Gokhale told The Hindu newspaper.
“It is once-in-a-lifetime procedure a doctor performs. The surgery – known as a heterotopic or piggyback heart transplant – is rare and worldwide only about 150 such procedures have ever been reported.”
The patient’s blood pressure returned to near-normal levels after the operation – but he now has two pulses and a complex electrocardiogram pattern.
Piggyback heart transplants were pioneered by Christiaan Barnard in South Africa in the 1970s and the average survival for the procedure is ten years.
In the UK, Hannah Clark spent more than ten years with a second heart after undergoing the operation as a two-year-old baby.
Her donor heart was removed in 2006 when her original organ returned to full strength.
Perhaps most famously, Doctor Who has two hearts – described as a “binary vascular system”.