This Article is From Aug 04, 2015

Heart Transplant Successful Due to Precision, Coordination in Mumbai

Heart Transplant Successful Due to Precision, Coordination in Mumbai

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Thane: A high-precision and well-coordinated effort between two cities led to a successful heart transplant at a private hospital in Mumbai on Monday.

The transplant was coordinated between Mumbai and Pune for a 22-year-old recipient suffering from intra-cranial bleed and was admitted at Fortis Hospital in suburban Mulund.

The heart came from a 42-year-old donor in Pune's Jehangir Hospital, doctors said.

The journey of the heart, retrieved by Sanjeev Jadhav, Consultant Surgeon, Fortis Hospital, began from Pune, with due consent taken from the donor's family and it was brought to Thane by a chartered flight.

The heart reached Fortis Hospital in 60 minutes after being harvested due to efforts of the Pune and Mumbai Police and airport authorities.

The usually busy 19-km route from Mumbai airport to Mulund was cleared of traffic by the authorities. This enabled the preserved heart to reach the Operation Theatre at Fortis in record 18 minutes and straight into the waiting hands of Anvay Mulay, Head of Cardiac Surgery, and his team.

"This is a momentous occasion for Fortis and the city of Mumbai. I congratulate the medical teams and particularly the traffic authorities at Pune and Mumbai. I'm sure this is the beginning that places our city firmly on the map as far as heart transplants are concerned," Sukhmeet Sandhu, Regional Director, Fortis Healthcare (Region-West & East), said.

Milind Bharambe, JCP (Traffic), said, "Meticulous planning and timely execution made this feat possible.

Advancing from the 'green corridor' in Pune, the heart was airlifted to Mumbai, moving further from Santacruz to Military Road to Santacruz-Chembur Link Road to Chedda Nagar to Eastern Express Highway to Airoli and finally to Fortis Hospital.

"Saving a valuable life made it well worth the effort and we are grateful that the citizens of Mumbai co-operated willingly in this humane endeavour," he said.

"The plane landed at 3.25 pm and the ambulance with the heart was out of the airport within 7 minutes," he said. Subsequently, DCPs, ACPs and nearly half a dozen Inspectors got on the job of clearing the way for the ambulance.

"The traffic at all the routes, from where the ambulance was supposed to pass, was halted for few minutes," he added.

The operation started at around 4 pm and concluded by late evening, doctors said.

The well-coordinated efforts from all concerned earned praise from Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, who tweeted, "Commendable coordination between Navy, Police, hospitals & citizens for the heart transplant mission in Mumbai. I appreciate!"
  The operation was completed in three hours. It took authorities an hour to transport the heart from Pune to Mumbai, a journey that would normally take around four hours. S Narayani, Zonal Director, Fortis, said, "It is indeed a proud moment for Mumbai, and for all of us at Fortis Mulund in what is the first such heart transplant.

"This move strengthens our resolve in making Mumbai a preferred healthcare destination for organ transplantation, particularly heart transplants. This is not just a case study of clinical excellence but also a testament to the massive coordination efforts between the traffic authorities, medical teams and the community in both the cities."

Dr Mulay of Fortis, said, "This is the beginning of a robust heart transplant programme in Mumbai and will help save many lives."

Fortis is a leading integrated healthcare delivery service provider in India. The healthcare verticals of the company primarily comprise hospitals, diagnostics and day care speciality facilities.

It provides healthcare delivery services in India, Dubai, Mauritius and Sri Lanka with 54 facilities.
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