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New York Methodist Offers Innovative Treatment Option for Heart Failure

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EPLabMeditation001_2.jpgContact:

 

Jodi-Ann Bailey

Public Affairs Associate

(718) 780-5367

jsb9010@nyp.org

 

Brooklyn, NY – July 30, 2009 – Congestive heart failure (CHF) is a condition in which the pumping mechanism of the heart becomes less efficient. The heart is no longer able to pump enough blood to supply the body with sufficient nutrients and oxygen. CHF, which develops over time, is usually secondary to illnesses such as coronary artery disease and hypertension that weaken or damage the heart. Statistics show that an estimated five million Americans have heart failure.

 

In about 30 percent of patients with CHF secondary to weakening of the heart muscle, an abnormality in the heart causes its two lower chambers to stop beating simultaneously, making the heart even less efficient. This abnormality is known as ventricular dyssynchrony, which can lead to more shortness of breath, problems with exercising and a higher risk of sudden cardiac death in patients with CHF.

 

Cardiac resynchronization therapy, which is now available at New York Methodist Hospital (NYM), is designed to correct ventricular dyssynchrony. “Numerous studies have shown that this device can decrease the risk of mortality from sudden cardiac death and improves heart function and quality of life in patients with moderate to severe heart failure,” said Gioia Turitto, M.D., cardiologist and director of electrophysiology at NYM. CRT improves the symptoms of heart failure in about 50 percent of patients who have been treated extensively with medications but still have severe or moderately severe heart failure symptoms.

 

Caption:

 

Gioia Turitto, M.D., director of electrophysiology, left, and David Benson, M.D., associate director of the electrophysiology laboratory.  

 

“CRT is the most important advance in the treatment of heart failure for appropriate patients since the introduction of beta-blockers,” said Jeremiah Gelles, M.D., attending physician in cardiology. 

 

Like a pacemaker, a cardiac resynchronization device sends tiny electrical pulses via leads (soft insulated wires) to the lower chambers of the heart to synchronize the contractions of the ventricles. The device also improves the heart’s ability to pump blood and oxygen throughout the body. “During the procedure to install the device, small incisions are made in the chest and the leads and device are inserted,” said Dr. Turitto. “Patients are given a local anesthetic and the patient is usually discharged from the Hospital within 24 hours.”

 

For more information or for a referral to a cardiac specialist at NYM please call 1.866.84.HEART.

 

New York Methodist Hospital

 

New York Methodist Hospital is a 618-bed voluntary, acute-care teaching facility located at 506 Sixth Street in Brooklyn's Park Slope, which provides services to over 32,000 in-patients each year.  An additional 350,000 out-patient visits and services are logged annually.  The Hospital, founded in 1881, has undergone extensive renovation and modernization over the years.  Recent programs and services added have included a new, state-of-the-art birthing center, an advanced interventional pulmonology program, a sleep disorders center, a reproductive endocrinology laboratory, an extensive neurosciences program that includes centers for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy and multiple sclerosis and an integrated stroke program, and the New York Methodist-Cornell Heart Center which provides Brooklyn’s most modern cardiac surgery and interventional cardiology facilities. The Hospital is affiliated with the Weill Medical College of Cornell University and it is a member of the NewYork-Presbyterian Health Care System.

 

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