Heart Surgery Without a Chest Incision

Franklin Jackson had wanted a new heart valve since he was 87.

The McKean County man’s old aortic valve was covered with calcium deposits, making it impossible to fully open. As a result, Jackson’s heart had to work harder than normal to pump blood through his body.

“If I walked my dog around the house, I’d get short of breath,” said Jackson, 90, a retired contractor. “I haven’t been in my (woodworking) shop for four or five months. I just didn’t have the energy.”

The extra strain on Jackson’s heart over the years caused him to develop congestive heart failure, a life-threatening and incurable disease.

Jackson met with a UPMC Hamot heart surgeon in 2010 to discuss replacing his heart valve. But he said the surgeon told him that the risks of open-heart surgery on a man his age, and overall health, outweighed the possible benefits.

“So I figured I would have to live with what I had,” Jackson said.

Read the full story at GoErie.com. 

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