Life after Bypass Surgery That unexpected event in your midlife might have come as a rude shock. An innocuous heartburn (which you had attributed to acidity) was proved to be due to an occluded coronary artery. Things moved at a pace which you did not fully comprehend, and here you are now recuperating from a bypass surgery!
Now what next? Does it mean that, it is the end of all good things in life? Do you have to give up everything and stay put at home? The answer is a loud, clear and resounding “NO” Let me tell you a few things about bypass surgery that you probably didn’t know before: 1. Coronary artery disease causes an obstruction to the arterial blood flow to the heart, resulting in symptoms varying from breathlessness to incapacitating chest pain. 2. A bypass surgery fixes only the flow related issue. Namely, by using a graft, the blood flow can be significantly increased. However, the diseased artery continues to remain so and over course of time can worsen. 3. Bypass surgery is only a part of the therapy. You would need to continue medications, modify lifestyle and take up to healthful ways of living. What is coronary bypass surgery? Coronary bypass – also called CABG – is the single most common open-heart operation performed in most parts of the world. When a coronary artery is blocked, an alternate route of blood supply may be created surgically. Using a variety of conduits (leg veins or other arteries harvested from the patient’s own body) a connection is made between the major blood vessel of the body, the aorta and the blocked coronary artery, beyond the area of obstruction. In this way, even though nothing is done about the block itself, blood is provided to the heart via the “bypass“… hence the term, coronary bypass surgery.