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February 21 2001
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Bypass Surgery Causes Mental Deterioration

 

A decline in mental function immediately after heart bypass surgery may be an indication that further intellectual decline will occur down the road.

When a vessel that delivers blood to the heart becomes blocked, one of the options for restoring blood flow is bypass surgery. The operation involves taking veins, and sometimes arteries, from other parts of the body and grafting them from the aorta to the coronary artery to bypass the blocked vessel.

The odds of surviving bypass surgery have improved since the operation was introduced, but the risk of experiencing a decline in mental function afterwards has remained steady since the 1980s. Signs of this decline may include trouble following directions, mood swings and short tempers.

Many doctors have downplayed the importance of any changes in intellectual abilities that occur after bypass, which can affect 50% to 80% of people who have the surgery, because the decline often appears to be temporary.

But even though decline in mental function is often temporary after bypass surgery, it may predict an increased risk of intellectual decline several years later. Five years after surgery, 42% of bypass patients had experienced a decline in intellectual abilities.

The New England Journal of Medicine 2001; 344: 395-402,451-452



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

It takes a great leap of faith to let someone crack open your chest and put you on a heart lung machine while they attempt to correct blockage in one's coronary arteries. It is actually quite an amazing piece of surgery, but in the vast majority of cases it is the classic example of traditional medicine doing too much too late and not treating the CAUSE of the problem.

Part of the reason that bypass patients suffer from a mental decline is that the surgeon only repairs about two inches of their blood vessels. They do virtually nothing to address the cause of the hardening of the arteries, except perhaps to use a drug to lower cholesterol and send the patient to a dietician who is equally as clueless about grains, sugars, insulin and optimized cholesterol levels.

Following the diet and exercise are two of the foundational aspects. Additionally one should screen for "hidden" causes of heart disease such as homocysteine and ferritin.

Once this issues are addressed you can click on the Surgical Procedure link below to find out how to find an ACAM doctor that can perform EDTA chelation to resolve the artery blockage. You can do a search on amazon.com to find many excellent books that review chelation therapy.

Related Articles:

Surgical Procedure May Not Be Worth the Risk

Excess Iron Damages Blood Vessels

Homocysteine Link To Heart Disease

Five Blood Risk Factors for Coronary Heart Disease

High Fibrinogen Bad for the Heart

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