An Australian man suffering from severe heart failure lived for more than three months with a titanium heart while waiting ...
18h
IFLScience on MSNAustralian Man Becomes World’s First To Leave Hospital With Titanium HeartA man in Australia who received a titanium heart has achieved a double world-first, after becoming the only person to survive ...
An Australian man lived for 100 days with an artificial titanium heart while he awaited a donor transplant, the longest ...
Suitable for most men and women, this small device uses a titanium biventricular rotary pump that, as Timms describes, contains a magnetically levitated rotor that pumps blood and therefore ...
An Australian man in his forties has become the first person in the world to leave hospital with an artificial heart made of ...
In early February, an Australian man in his 40s became the first person in the world to leave hospital with a virtually ...
The patient, a man in his 40s from New South Wales, received a device called BiVACOR, at St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney last ...
The man received an artificial heart made of titanium called BiVACOR ... The device uses a magnetically suspended rotor to pump blood throughout the body and lungs at regular intervals—just ...
The patient, a man in his 40s from New South Wales, received the BiVACOR Total Artificial Heart (TAH) during a six-hour ...
This magnetically levitating rotor spins between two chambers while never coming into contact with the titanium frame itself, and thus eliminates the risk of gradual corrosion or malfunctions.
The BiVACOR Total Artificial Heart (TAH) has a single moving part, a levitated rotor that’s held in place by magnets. As the name suggests, it’s constructed from titanium and there are no ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results