What Professionals Have to Say
On September 21, comedian and actor Raju Srivastava passed away at the age of 58. On August 10, while exercising in the gym, he experienced a heart attack and was subsequently hospitalized at AIIMS, Delhi. On the same day, he had an angioplasty, and he spent 41 days on a ventilator. Raju Srivastav’s nephew, Kaushal, reportedly told the Indian Express that the comedian died as a result of a heart arrest on September 21. Many people are now pondering whether cardiac arrest can occur after angioplasty in light of the revelation.
We will first attempt to comprehend what is angioplasty before moving on to discuss its potential of it.
It is a procedure used to widen blood vessels or artery openings that have become clogged or restricted by plaque in order to restore normal blood flow to the heart. The majority of contemporary angioplasty treatments, according to NHS UK, also involve placing a small wire-mesh tube known as a stent into the artery. To promote better blood flow, the stent is left in the artery permanently.
Dr. Amit Patil, a consultant interventional cardiologist at Wockhardt Hospital in Mumba, said to Indian Express that a person who has been brought back from a cardiac arrest by a prompt medical intervention such as Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) can experience a cardiac arrest once more. People who have previously survived a cardiac arrest are more likely to experience one again, he continued.
Dr. Patil was reported as saying, “Angioplasty can provide a satisfactory result with extremely minimal chances of abrupt cardiac arrest only in those patients who are stable, or those who do not have comorbidities.”
In his explanation of Raju Srivastava’s case, he stated that there was always a 50% possibility that a second attack would occur even after angioplasty was completed.