Had triple bypass aged 74, still here now 84 there is no pain whatsoever . Op performed by very clever people and the after care is brilliant you’ve got nothing to worry about your in safe hands.many thanks to nurses and surgeons
@@AndreRamoneMusic I made it. Now just trying to recover. Some days I can't hardly walk but I try and sometimes dizzy. Hopefully this will go away soon.
Before I had my surgery last year one of my friends had spoken to me to tell me he too had had the operation and that there was nothing to worry about. His words gave me great comfort. Unfortunately he just recently passed away. May he rest in peace.
I had my surgery at the phil heart center dec 4 and after ten days i was discharged from the hospital. Thank you Lord for a successful surgery. As of now going back to work as a school teacher since feb.
I had a triple bypass in March of 2021. I was 68 at the time. I was discharged on day four. Overall, things went smoothly. I did not have any symptoms before or after the surgery. The VA saw issues during a routine stress test on a treadmill. They wanted to prevent a heart attack rather than wait for one. My biggest complaint was all the wires and tubes that totally entangled me. Also, the obnoxious and perpetual beeping from every system in the room drove me crazy.
I had quadraple by-pass surgery in Australia 10yrs ago...Thanks to everyone..I am still alive and active...Thanks to all in Wesley Hospital in Brisbane, QLD...I am almost 71yrs old now...very careful, what i am eating...
I had a 5xCABG 5y ago at age 48 and still going strong, i was only off work 3 weeks. I had knee surgery worse than this well as far as recover goes. The worst part of the whole deal was going through that heart attack and then when they finally pulled those chest tubes out it felt a whole lot better. I was lucky, I had the surgery at 6 AM on a Monday morning and they released me to go home 2 1/2 days later on Wednesday afternoon
My father had this done on October 12, 2023 During surgery the doctor said that the main artery erupted and also another artery. He said it was difficult to control the blood but finally was successful. Then after the surgery I went to visit him and all his vital signs were fine. That he only needed to rest and in 2 or 3 days they would remove the breathing tube. Next day the doctor calls me saying that my dad passed away. That they did everything they could. Wtf something suspicious right here. The doctor never showed and I only talk to the nurse. The hospital owes me explanations. I miss you so much dad. Rip
Hi stranger. I am CCU nurse. I came through this video today because I had exactly same case today and my patient died. He was fine after the CABG of 2nd day but there was internal bleeding everything was fine but all of sudden he had cardiac arrest and yes we did everything we could at the middle of the night 2am. I was there giving CPR all the team we gave CPR for 1 hr,Defibrillator shock, adrenaline and all we could . At night shift it was heart aching moment for us as well. Sometimes the things are not just in our hands. But sorry for your loss but they should have explained you the situation.
@@anishadhakal4521*we understand as a closed one of patients that not everything is in your hand, but after any mishaps, medical staff don't even try to. Console us, or give proper explanation.*
Prayers for your brother. My 82 year old grandmother just had a quad bypass on Friday. She’s still recovering in the hospital but she’s strong and determined to get better.
Retired RN here; do they still use Swan-Ganz monitoring & arterial lines? In the early 1980s we set all that up in the OR, plus mixed the induction meds, IV meds (4 different ones) and assisted the anesthesiologist. Take-back rate was ZERO!💕😊
@OceanSwimmer yes we do use the swan. I personally hate it. They are usually not placed correctly. Take back is rare but does happen. Commonly due to bleeding.
This video sure makes it sound nicer than it actually is! Had a quad bypass in 2016. I will say that I had a much better time, of a more complicated procedure, than my father did in 1998. Techniques have definitely improved.
@@physicswallah6257 Well, for a 91 year old I’d say he’s doing pretty good! Yeah, I just remember his. Single bypass and it took him months to recover. They had me up and walking within 4 hours of waking up.
God bless you. My wife helped me get through all this. Your support will mean everything to him. It's tough and recovery will be months, but it is so worth the struggle. Best wishes from the Florida Key's. 🙏
So if a heart stops beating on its own, you’re done. But a surgeon can stop and restart it. 🤔 fascinating. We need a video explaining that in more depth and detail. Love the education
In recovery right now. Husband's Cardio. Dr. Wants him to see surgeon for bypass surgery. Dbl for sure. I'm scared . He doesn't handle things well. He just turned 60. We got 5 adult kids and 17 grandkids. He's their CRAZY Grandpa! I'm afraid he's gonna give up after this. I know he could thrive . Pra6 that he finds his courage from within himself 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Today is 2 weeks since my quadruple bypass. Should start physical therapy in the next few days. Pain as expected, but always some degree of pressure in chest area. P.s. - get off opiate pain killers as fast as possible. They will back you up. Can hurt as bad as the surgery.
2:30 Correct me if I’m wrong but a non beating heart can not be shocked to start again. The heart will simply start beating when the surgeon removes the clamp on the aorta and the potassium blocking the nervous system of the heart distributes out into the body.
My mom's there veins have blocked, Doctors suggested us of bypass but we are very afraid & tennis, because we don't know about authentic surgeon & medicines