An artificial heart that can give patients up to five years of extra life has been successfully implanted for the first time.
法国巴黎蓬皮杜医院医生成功地为病人体内植入一颗能为他延长寿命5年的人工心脏。
The heart, powered by watch-style batteries that can be worn externally, was put into a patient at Paris's Georges Pompidou Hospital.
It uses a range of "biomaterials", including
bovine2(牛的) tissue, to reduce the likelihood of the body rejecting it.
Unlike previous artificial hearts, created mainly for temporary use, the design by the French Carmat biomedical firm is intended to replace a real heart for as many as five years.
French medics said the unnamed male patient who received the device was awake and responding well after an operation on Wednesday. Marcello Conviti, the chief executive of Carmat, said: "We are delighted with this first
implant1, although it is
premature3 to draw conclusions given that a single implant has been performed and that we are in the early post-operative phase."
The artificial heart, developed with the help of engineers from the Dutch-based European
Aeronautic4 Defence and Space Company (EADS), weighs 2lbs -- almost three times as much as an average healthy human heart. It
mimics5 heart muscle
contractions6 and contains
sensors7 that adapt the blood flow to the patient's moves.
Inside the heart, surfaces that come into contact with human blood are made partly from bovine tissue instead of
synthetic8 materials such as plastic, which can cause blood
clots9.
The new device could help thousands of people who die each year while waiting for a
donor10, including many in Britain. Nearly 100,000 people in Europe and the United States are in need of a heart transplant, according to Carmat. The company claims its device should enable hospital patients to return home and possibly even resume work.
Alain Carpentier, the surgeon who performed the implant, said: "It's about giving patients a normal social life with the least
dependence11 on medication as possible.
"We've already seen devices of this type but they had a
relatively12 low autonomy. This heart will allow for more movement and less
clotting13. The study that is starting is being very closely watched in the medical field." Heart failure affects more men than women, and the size of the artificial heart means it can fit in 86 per cent of men's bodies but only about 20 per cent of women. However, Carmat says it can manufacture a smaller version to fit the more petite bodies of women as well as patients in India and China.
The artificial heart will raise France's reputation as a country at the forefront of medical innovation.