facts. For example, the press wrote repeatedly that Dr. Clark [the first recipient of the Jarvik 7 artificial heart] died of a stroke. In fact, he never had a stroke at all. The press wrote over and over that the console a patient needed to power the heart was 'as large as a refrigerator.' In fact, the home console is about half that size, but more significantly — the portable power system was only the size of a briefcase" [4]. Dr. Jarvik also said the “press also wrote that the Jarvik 7 heart caused a high rate of strokes and infections. The press didn't notice that as more cases were done, these rates plummeted, yet the device was the same. So the device alone was never responsible for the earlier complications. Rather, doctors needed to learn how to manage their patients more effectively: That is the point of such research in the first place” [4]. The most incorrect of all of these statements however, is the one that says that the Jarvik 7 heart was a failure. The Jarvik 7 artificial heart has had the highest success rate of any total artificial heart or heart assist device in the history of such devices [4]. The heart is now available in the United States, Canada, Germany , and France under its new ownership and renamed the CardioWest total artificial heart [4].Picture of Jarvik 7 heart courtesy of http://www.medicineandbiotech.com/
Information courtesy of
[4] http://www.jarvikheart.com/basic.asp?id=69





