Skip to content

New Procedure Helps Patients with High Risks

A less invasive procedure offers new options for high-risk patients

By Niki Stojnic January 20, 2016

A surgeon holding a red heart in his hands.
A surgeon holding a red heart in his hands.

This article originally appeared in the February 2016 issue of Seattle magazine.

When surgeons are dealing with clogged or narrowed aortic valves, they often perform a procedure that involves opening the chest in order to replace the blocked valve with an artificial one.

For some heart patients, such as the elderly, the surgery is too risky. Bellevue’s Overlake Medical Center and Group Health Cooperative have teamed up to offer a new, less invasive procedure, performed at Overlake: transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). The procedure involves inserting a catheter through the ribs or the femoral artery to the heart, creating a pathway through which surgeons insert a replacement valve. This is all accomplished without having to open the patient’s chest.

Overlake is one of just four medical centers in Washington state offering this treatment. Normally, patients with such severe valve blockage or narrowing have a mortality rate as high as 50 percent, according to Scott J. Haugen, M.D., an interventional cardiologist at Group Health Bellevue Medical Center and co-medical director of the TAVR program at Overlake Medical Center.

Doctors hope to eventually use TAVR for patients who are not at high risk, and are awaiting results of current studies to find out if the procedure can be used more widely.

 

Follow Us

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

The grants are part of the company’s 50th anniversary this year

Microsoft has given 20 organizations $50,000 each as part of its AI for Good grants program. The grants — part of an initiative to celebrate Microsoft’s 50th anniversary this year — recognize organizations for their innovations in artificial intelligence. The organizations — who applied for the grants earlier this year — receive resources to help…

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Both transit travel and driving trips are on the rise

Downtown Seattle foot traffic still isn’t nearly what it was prior to the pandemic, but more people are commuting to offices on a regular basis. The 2024 Commute Seattle Survey finds that both transit travel and drive-alone trips are on the rise as remote working drops. Citywide, the percentage of people reporting that their jobs…

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

The nonprofit has launched a fundraising campaign to make up for a $350,000 deficit

For Patti Hearn, no amount is too small. Every little bit helps. Hearn, executive director of Seattle Pride, is working feverishly to bridge a $350,000 fundraising gap because of shifts in corporate sponsorship. Seattle Pride — a nonprofit foundation that produces the annual Seattle Pride Parade and a slew of other events, including Seattle Pride…

Tapped Out

Tapped Out

Washington lawmakers propose doubling beer and wine taxes

You might be paying significantly more for your pint next year.  House Bill 2079, introduced by Representative Lauren Davis (D–District 32), would raise the tax on beer from $4.78 to $9.56 per barrel for most breweries. The bill also proposes doubling taxes on wine from 1 cent to 2 cents per liter and increasing taxes…