Totally Implantable Artificial Heart: Still a Major Challenge

Authors

  • Antonis S Manolis Athens University School of Medicine & First Department of Cardiology, Evagelismos General Hospital of Athens, Athens, Greece
  • Theodora A Manolis Patras University School of Medicine, Patras

Keywords:

heart failure, artificial heart, ventricular assist devices

Abstract

The first mechanical heart was placed by Liotta and Cooley in 1969 in a dying patient at the Texas Heart Institute in Houston as a 2 ½-day bridge for a transplant, albeit the patient died 32 hours after transplantation.1 Years later (1982) a totally implantable artificial heart (model Jarvik-7) was permanently implanted in a patient by DeVries et al at the University of Utah Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA and the patient lived for 112 days.2 Subsequent attempts of implantation of a total artificial heart (e.g. CardioWest/SynCardia models) have limited its use as a bridge to transplantation, like the left- or bi-ventricular assist devices (VADs).3-7 The SynCardia model (SynCardia Systems Inc., Tuscon, AZ) has been approved for compassionate use by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for patients with end-stage biventricular heart failure as a bridge to transplantation since 1985 and has had FDA approval since 2004.3-5 The SynCardia™ total artificial heart, weighing 180 g, providing a stroke volume of 70 cc, is a pneumatically driven, pulsatile system capable of flows of >9L/min. It is indicated for temporary use as a bridge to transplantation in patients with end-stage non-reversible bi-ventricular failure. Currently, the recipients of this device are hospital-bound and attached to a large pneumatic driver. The bridge to transplantation rate has been ~80% in >1100 implants. In 2010, the FDA gave conditional approval for an Investigational Device Exemption clinical study of the portable Freedom driver (SynCardia) (www.syncardia.com)... (excerpt)

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2014-02-24

Issue

Section

Editorial

How to Cite

Totally Implantable Artificial Heart: Still a Major Challenge. (2014). Rhythmos, 9(1), 1-3. https://www.rhythmos.gr/index.php/Rhythmos/article/view/145

Similar Articles

1-10 of 133

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.