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Tuesday, December 24, 2013

French Doctors Perform World's First Artificial Heart Transplant Wednesday Dec 18,2013


Chairman of Carmat Jean-Claude Cadudal (left), Professor Christian Latremouille (centre) of the department of cardiovascular surgery and transplant of organs at the Georges Pompidou European Hospital and French Social Affairs and Health Minister Marisol Touraine attend a news conference at the Georges Pompidou European Hospital in Paris, December 21, 2013





For the first time, an artificial heart that may give patients up to five years of extra life has been successfully implanted in a 75-year-old French man.

French Social Affairs and Health Minister Marisol Touraine, left, and Alain Carpentier, surgeon and Carmat co-founder attend a news conference at the Georges Pompidou European Hospital in Paris




The artificial heart, designed by French biomedical firm Carmat, is powered by Lithium-ion batteries that can be worn externally.

The heart that was put into the patient at Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris uses a range of "bio-materials", including bovine tissue, to reduce the likelihood of the body rejecting it

This device is intended to replace a real heart for as many as five years, unlike previous artificial hearts that were created mainly for temporary use

Doctors said the patient(male) who received the device developed by Dutch-based European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS) was awake and responding well after the operation conducted on Wednesday Dec 18,2013 at the Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris.
"We are delighted with this first implant, although it is premature to draw conclusions given that a single implant has been performed and that we are in the early post-operative phase," Marcello Conviti, the chief executive of Carmat, said.


The heart weighs as little as less than a kilogramme almost three times as much as an average healthy human heart.








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