Heart Bypass Surgery in Israel

Hospitals and medical centers in Israel performing Heart Bypass surgery.
Browse by city: Tel Aviv|Jerusalem|Haifa
University Hospital in Jerusalem, Israel
Heart Bypass is available
Hadassah medical institution includes two university hospitals in Jerusalem – on Mt. Scopus and in Ein Kerem. Both provide advanced tetriary healthcare services in all medical specialties.

Prof. Dan Admon

Prof. Dan Admon

Heart Failure & Transplantation Program
Prof. Amir Elami

Prof. Amir Elami

Cardiothoracic Surgery
Public Hospital in 15 KM from Tel Aviv, Israel
Heart Bypass is available
✓ ISO certified
One of the largest hospitals in Israel with 900 beds and 700 physicians. The hospital serves 1000 medical tourists annually, providing advanced medical care at the highest western standards.

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Dr. Therese Fuchs, MD

Director, Electrophysiology and Pacemaker Laboratory
Public Hospital in Haifa, Israel
Heart Bypass is available
A large teaching hospital staffed by over 4,000 physicians, nurses, researchers, and allied caregivers, Rambam is Northern Israel’s largest hospital, a tertiary referral center for a population of over 2 million people.

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Prof. Milo Simcha

Head of the Department of Cardiac Surgery
Dr. Doron Aronson, M.D.

Dr. Doron Aronson, M.D.

Director, Inpatient Cardiology Unit and Unit of Coronary Care
Public Hospital in Tel Hashomer, Israel
Heart Bypass is available
The largest medical centre in Israel and the Middle East, internationally renowned for it's medical excellence. Around 31,000 inpatients are treated annually.

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Dr. Adler Yehuda

Preventive Cardiology and Cardiac Rehabilitation
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Dr. Agranat Oren

Heart, Cardiac
Cardiac centers in Israel (Page 1 of 1)

About Heart Bypass

This information is intended for general information only and should not be considered as medical advice on the part of Health-Tourism.com. Any decision on medical treatments, after-care or recovery should be done solely upon proper consultation and advice of a qualified physician.
Bypass surgery, also called coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery, is a surgical procedure performed to relieve angina and reduce the risk of death from coronary artery disease.
Arteries or veins are grafted from different parts of the patient's body to the coronary arteries in order to bypass the atherosclerotic narrowings and improve the blood supply to the coronary circulation supplying the heart muscle.
This surgery is usually performed with the heart stopped, necessitating the usage of cardiopulmonary bypass.
Bypass surgery is the most common major surgery in the USA, with over 500,000 surgeries performed anually.

New techniques for CABG:
- OCABG (off-pump CABG), is a technique to perform CABG on a beating heart.
- MICABG (minimally invasive CABG) is a technique where the incision is smaller, reducing some of the risks of this surgery. 


Duration of procedure/surgery:
2-6 hours, depending on the number of bypasses to be performed.

Days admitted:
Usually 4-7 days (3-4 days in case of a minimally invasive CABG)

Anesthesia:
General anesthesia

Recovery:
You might be able to move around a few days after the surgery, according to your status and the doctor's advice.
Usually you will be able to get back to work within 12 weeks.

Risks:
Between 2-5% of patients have some sort of complications.
As with any surgical procedure, there are risks of infection and heavy bleeding, as well as risks associated with general anesthesia.