Jerusalem – Israeli Flies to US With Permanent Artificial Heart in His Chest

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    Jerusalem – A 71-year-old man with a permanent artificial heart pumping in his chest is reportedly the first in the world to take a trans-Atlantic flight and spend a vacation abroad.

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    The Israeli, Gershon Gefen, underwent the implantation of the HeartMate 2 device at the Rabin Medical Center-Beilinson Campus in Petah Tikva last year.

    Only a handful of such implantations have been performed here so far. His pump was implanted by Dr. Eyal Porat, head of the cardiothoracic surgery department, and Dr. Binyamin Medallion of the heart-lung transplant unit. They were assisted by a German surgeon with special expertise in such implantation, who arrived for the procedure.

    The recipient wanted to visit his daughter who lives in the US. He recovered well from his surgery and pleaded with insurance companies to allow him to fly. All turned him down. Ultimately, the Ayalon company agreed to give him health and flight insurance.

    However, even though Gefen could get insurance, airlines refused to fly him. They claimed the electronic equipment he needed would upset the plane’s communications system, that there was no suitable infrastructure, and that, by law, only a laptop computer could be brought into the passenger area.

    Desperate, he turned to Medallion and Dr. Tuvia Ben-Gan, a Beilinson expert in cardiac insufficiency, who said there was no problem, as long as the device supporting the heart was connected to a power line throughout the flight.

    Finally, El Al invited him for a dry run, to connect him to a jet’s power line. The experiment passed without problems, and Gefen received authorization. A technician from the artificial heart implantation unit at Beth Israel Hospital in New York fitted a device that made it possible for him to recharge using 110 volts of electricity rather than Israel’s 220 volts.

    Gefen, who returned to Israel safely after a three-week visit, praised El Al for making the effort, and especially the company’s electronics officer, Michael Rifkin. “Without his help, and that of Beilinson physicians, I would never have gotten off the ground,” Gefen said.


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    5 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Impressive!!

    bunimfrombrooklyn
    bunimfrombrooklyn
    14 years ago

    Wow its such a beautiful story to hear i hope he stays healthy all the way till 120.

    Cher
    Cher
    14 years ago

    This is really the days of moshiach! MAy Hashem continue to send the cure to each sickness, and send moshiach now.

    Raphael Kaufman
    Raphael Kaufman
    14 years ago

    The claim that electronic devices interfere with an aircraft’s navigation system, or with other electronic systems on the aircraft, or with electronic systems in hospitals is one that was once true but is no longer. The old 4 watt analog cell phones were powerfull enough and transmitted over a wide enough spectrum to screw up the electronic systems around them. Many tests have shown that current 150 milliwatt digital phones do not interfere with properly installed aircraft systems or hospital monitoring equipment. Traditions die hard.

    Curious
    Curious
    14 years ago

    Why couldn’t his daughter go to Israel to visit him?