Before the procedure
You may be admitted to the hospital a few days before getting an LVAD. While you're in the hospital, you may have other treatments for your weakened heart or heart failure.
During this time, tests are done to make sure an LVAD is still your best treatment option. Tests may include:
- Blood tests. Different blood tests are done to see how well the heart, liver, kidneys and other organs are working. A complete blood count and blood clotting studies are done to make sure your blood isn't too thin for surgery.
- Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG). This quick and painless test records the electrical signals in the heart. It can show the rhythm of the heart and how fast or how slowly the heart is beating.
- Chest X-ray. A chest X-ray shows the size and shape of the heart and can show certain problems with the lungs.
- Echocardiogram. Sound waves create images of the heart in motion. This test shows the structure of the heart and heart valves and blood flow through the heart. An echocardiogram can help determine whether a ventricular assist device is the right treatment option.
- Cardiac catheterization. A long, thin flexible tube called a catheter is inserted in a blood vessel, usually in the neck. It's moved to the heart using X-rays as a guide. During this test, pressures and blood flow in the heart can be checked. This test can help determine if an LVAD or other treatment is needed.
During the procedure
Getting an LVAD often requires open-heart surgery. The surgery usually takes three or more hours. You can expect the following:
- Any hair on the chest is shaved from the area where surgery will take place.
- You'll get medicines through an IV to make you sleepy and pain-free during the surgery.
- You'll be connected to a machine that helps you breathe during your surgery. This machine is called a ventilator.
- Your heart may be stopped using medicines during the surgery. If so, you'll be connected to a heart-lung bypass machine. The machine keeps oxygen-rich blood flowing through your body during surgery.
If you're getting a left ventricular assist device (LVAD), the surgeon makes a cut down the center of the chest. The surgeon separates the chest bone to better view the heart and then places the device.
An LVAD has several parts.
- The main pump is inserted into the tip of the heart.
- The blood pumps through a flexible plastic tube to the body's main artery, called the aorta.
- The aorta sends blood to the rest of the body.
- A cord inserted through an opening in the skin connects the pump to a control unit and battery pack outside the body.
After your LVAD is in place and working properly, you'll be taken off the heart-lung bypass machine so your LVAD can start pumping blood.
After the procedure
You stay in the hospital after LVAD surgery. How long you stay in the hospital depends on your health before the surgery and how quickly you recover.
At the hospital, your health care team watches you for complications. Tubes drain urine from your bladder. Tubes also drain fluid and blood from your heart and chest.
You usually receive:
- Fluids and medicines given by IV.
- Antibiotics to prevent infections.
- Blood-thinning medicine to prevent blood clots.
You may be on a breathing machine, called a ventilator, for a few days.
As you recover in the hospital, your health care team helps you become more active and stronger. They'll help you sit up, get out of bed and walk. If you need more time to improve your strength, a short stay at a rehabilitation center may be recommended.
Before you leave the hospital, your health care team talks to you and your family about how to live with and properly care for an LVAD. Some of the things you'll learn include:
- How to clean the skin where the LVAD was placed.
- What to do if there are symptoms of infection, including fever and pain, redness, or drainage.
- How to keep the device charged. It's important to always have spare batteries with you.
- How to check the controller for dirt and the batteries for damage.
- What to do if the LVAD isn't working properly.
- How to shower without damaging the device.
- What to do if the device's alarm goes off.
Your health care team tells you when you can safely return to daily life activities such as driving, exercising, going to work or being sexually active. You'll also get tips on how to safely travel with an LVAD.
Don't hesitate to talk to your health care team if you have any concerns about living with a ventricular assist device.