Underinsured Americans Saves 60% on Bypass Surgery in India Facilitated by Forerunners Healthcare
India is becoming one of the favorite medical destinations for underinsured Americans, they are saving 60% on bypass surgery in India with the help of forerunners healthcare. Underinsured Americans and other citizens who are not having any health insurance and wishing to have an affordable bypass surgery which is not possible in their own country because of the high cost of medical healthcare facilities and long waiting list in the government hospitals, Cardiac surgery hospitals in India at Mumbai, Chennai, Delhi, and Bangalore are providing affordable bypass surgery in India with the best medical healthcare facilities. The cost of living in America is too expensive the basic needs like stay, food and medicine in America is very costly if a patient plans his surgery their more than half of his money is spent in fulfilling his basic needs. It is little bit easy for the patients who are insured by medical insurance, but every one cannot afford the high premium medical insurance. U.S patients who are underinsured or who cannot afford the high premium of medical insurance every year, they can have their bypass surgery in India at very low cost. Here are some videos of some abroad patients who were treated at Indian hospitals; this will help you to know more about the facilities you will get in India.
What is bypass surgery?
This surgery is done to by-pass clogged arteries supplying blood to the heart. It creates a ‘bypass’ around the blocked part of a coronary artery to restore the blood supply to the heart muscle. The surgery is called Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting, or CABG. Commonly known as bypass surgery
How is bypass surgery done?
After the patient is anesthetized and becomes unconscious, the surgeon makes an incision in the middle of the chest and separates the breastbone. Through this incision, the surgeon can see the heart and aorta (the main blood vessel leading from the heart to the rest of the body). After surgery, the breastbone is rejoined with wires and the incision is closed.
If a vein from the leg is to be used for the bypass, an incision is made in the leg and the saphenous vein removed by another surgeon operating simultaneously. This vein is located on the inside of the leg running from the ankle to the groin. It normally does only about 10% of the work of circulating blood from the leg back to the heart. Therefore, it can be taken out without harming the patient or adversely affecting the leg. It is common for the leg from which the vein is taken to swell slightly during recovery from the surgery, but this is only temporary and treated with elevation of the leg, and special stockings.
Alternatively the internal mammary artery (IMA) can also be used for the graft. This has the advantage of staying open for many more years than the vein grafts, but there are some situations in which it cannot be used. Other arteries are also now being used in bypass surgery. The most common other artery used is the radial artery. This is one of the two arteries that supply the hand with blood. It can usually be removed from the arm without any impairment of blood supply to the hand.
In the traditional surgery, the patient is connected to the heart-lung machine, or bypass pump, which adds oxygen to the blood and circulates blood to other parts of the body during the surgery. This is necessary because the heart muscle must be stopped before the graft can be done. One end of the graft is stitched to an opening below the blockage in the coronary artery. If the grafted vein is from the leg or the radial artery, its other end is stitched to an opening made in the aorta. If the grafted vessel is the mammary artery, its other end is already connected to the aorta.
The entire surgery usually takes four to six hours. After the surgery, the patient is kept in the Intensive Care Unit. For a few days after the surgery, the patient is connected to monitors and tubes. Other techniques to do this surgery are used more and more frequently. One popular method is to avoid the use of the heart-lung machine. This is called off-pump coronary artery bypass or OPCAB. This operation allows the bypass to be created while the heart is still beating. The advantage being a quicker recovery and fewer complications especially in elderly patients and in patients with problem like kidney failure and previous brain strokes etc.
What are the risks of surgery?
- Heart attack can occur during 5% of these surgeries
- Stroke can also occur in 5% of these surgeries (the risk is greatest in those over 70 years old)
- Blood clots in legs and their migration to lungs.
- Death may occur in 1-2% of those who have the surgery (95-98% have no serious complications)
- Wound infection may occur in 1-4% of these surgeries. This complication is most often associated with obesity, diabetes, or a previous CABG.
- The incision in the chest or the graft site (if the graft was from the leg or arm) can be itchy, sore, numb, or bruised
Hospitals of bypass surgery in India at Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Hyderabad are recording increasing number of uninsured patients for bypass surgery in India. Heart surgery is the common treatments for patients coming to India, the infrastructure and medical technology in India is par with that in USA, UK and Europe. The good facilities provided in India are certainly beneficial but also the skyrocketing medical costs and long waiting lists to get treated by the specialists in the western countries are helping Indian medical tourism industry. Medical tourism also provide combine packages of holiday and medical treatment in India The natural scenery in India is as delicious as the rich aromas of jasmine, which permeate the air. Feast your eyes on the serene beaches, glorious mountains and exotic deserts. Enjoy the wildlife that India has to offer in the varied National Parks and Wildlife Safaris.
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