I think there's some miscommunication between you and your health care provider; low heart enzymes do not prevent surgery.
The term "open heart surgery" is really used incorrectly. We use it to mean a surgery where the chest is cut open to get the heart. A "bypass surgery" is where they cut open your chest and reroute the large blood vessels (arteries) on the outside of the heart. We do wrongfully call Bypass Surgery a type of Open Heart Surgery. But I would call a real "open heart surgery" where they cut open the chest and then cut open the heart to work inside the heart, like replace valves.
Two benefits that will come from robotic heart surgery are reduced staff and reduced surgeon fatigue. With reduced staff participating in the actual surgery, the costs would then be less.
If your gallbladder was removed, any gallstones would be removed with it. The gallbladder is a lot like a pouch, and the stones would be enclosed inside of it.
It would not be a good idea for a person who has had heart surgery to use Viagra. There is a definite risk of heart attack.
A seven-day diet plan for a heart surgery patient would depend on the type of surgery and the underlying condition. For example, a valve replacement patient may not need significant fat and sodium restriction beyond that of a normal patient. A neonatal heart surgery patient should be on breastmilk.
Usually in a Doctors surgery, a Doctor would use a stethoscope to listen to your heart and lungs.
This probably isn't helpful considering Viagra gives you a stiff one. The blood going from the heart to your ,area, would probably cause problems during surgery.
This probably isn't helpful considering Viagra gives you a stiff one. The blood going from the heart to your ,area, would probably cause problems during surgery.
duh. did you read your question before you asked it? that's got to be one of the stupidest questions I've heard in a long time. -- If the surgery was not on the heart, then there would be no point for the surgeon to be there. I believe you were badly mistaken, unless of course this "HEART" is something else, which I doubt at the present moment it is.
As all blood flows back to the heart, clamping down on blood vessels is very important in open heart surgery. Clamping down on blood vessels will slow down blood flow so that while in surgry, the blood wouldn't come in, as it naturally would, and flood the chambers of the heart. And because it's an open heart surgery, the blood would go nowhere and it wouldn't be circulated back throughout the body. The patient would probably die from loss of blood as a result.
A scapel and retractors
A scapel and retractors