This is the 11th heart transplant undertaken at the AIIMS in 2016, the highest number in the last few years, officials said.
"The patient suffered from ischemic heart disease (condition that affects the supply of blood to the heart) and already had a stent procedure surgery. The heart was harvested from the 30-year-old man in Indore who had died in a road accident.
Doctors and experts at the institute say the upward trend in the number of transplants in recent time can be attributed to increased awareness especially through campaign and advocacy programmes.
"The surgery was performed on October 4 and the patient belongs to Jamia Nagar. The 11 transplants this year so far, makes it one of the highest in recent years," Senior Organ Transplant Coordinator at AIIMS, Rajeev Maikhuri said.
Professor at Department of Cardiology, AIIMS, Dr Sandeep Seth, at a press conference here, said, "The country's first heart transplant was done at AIIMS on August 3, 1994. Last year we did five and three the year before that. The total number of heart transplant surgeries undertaken at AIIMS is so far 48."
"There are a lot of factors considered before conducting the transplant. The recipient list is categorised based on blood groups, and so right now B+ group list is vacant here, which means, if a heart comes from a donor who was B+, it cannot be used," he said.
Airan, who was part of the team at the premier institute which performed the country's first heart transplant said, "more than age difference between donor-recipient, it is the weight difference that matters when it comes to transplants."
"AIIMS is currently offering heart transplant facilities at Rs one lakh for surgery with medication at Rs 25,000 per month, and ventricular assist device implantation at Rs 70 lakh," the institute said.
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Airan also spoke about a man from Lucknow, who received an LVAD (left ventricular assist device) few months ago at the AIIMS.
LVAD is a pump that is used for patients who have reached end-stage of heart failure. It is inserted inside the patient with thin wire emerging out of the body linked to a power source outside.
"At private hospitals, it (LVAD) costs about Rs 90 lakh. At AIIMS, the Lucknow patient was the first one to receive the third-generation of the device," Seth said.
"If the device does not prove effective then transplant is the only option," Airan added.
The AIIMS also said "after launching an app earlier for its patients to monitor health parameters, now a health card system has also been introduced.
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