Doctors in India removing a 4cm piece of drill from a beating heart

Doctors in India remove 4cm-long piece of drill from beating heart

Fascinating video shows doctors in India removing a 4cm-long piece of drill from a patient’s beating heart in a life-or-death operation

  • WARNING, GRAPHIC CONTENT
  • Drill operator Satish Kumar was rushed to hospital after a grisly work accident
  • A 4cm-long bit of metal snapped off of his drill and pierced his chest and heart
  • Doctors gave Mr Kumar, from New Delhi, little chance of surviving the injury 
  • A specialist team at Fortis Hospital in Noida defied all odds and kept him alive

Fascinating footage shows doctors removing a large piece of metal from a beating heart in a life-or-death operation.

Drill operator Satish Kumar, from India, was blue-lighted to hospital after a horrific accident at work that nearly killed him.

A 4cm-long bit of metal snapped off his drill and pierced into his chest, puncturing his heart and narrowly missing the main artery.

Doctors gave Mr Kumar little chance of surviving the injury, describing it as like being shot straight in the heart with a gun.

But a specialist team at Fortis Hospital in Noida – just outside New Delhi – defied all odds to keep the 32-year-old alive.

Surgeons led by Dr Vaibhav Mishra performed an emergency surgery, removing the metallic fragment from his heart.

They have today released a gruesome 90-second long clip of the operation that saved Mr Kumar, which shows his heart beating rapidly.

In a desperate attempt to keep him alive, they use forceps to dig into the heart to pull out the metal buried ‘deep inside his heart’.


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They also repaired his left ventricle – one of four vital chambers of the organ, where the metal had lodged itself.

Mr Kumar, who works in a factory near New Delhi, endured the life-threatening injury little more than two weeks ago.

By the time he reached hospital, he had already lost vast amounts of blood and time, which is essential for hopes of survival.


Drill operator Satish Kumar, from India, was blue-lighted to hospital after a horrific accident at work that nearly killed him. A 4cm-long bit of metal (left) snapped off his drill and pierced into his chest, puncturing his heart and narrowly missing the main artery

It missed one of his coronary arteries – which supply blood to the heart – by just a few millimetres, local reports state.

Newsflare, a video news agency, claims five hospitals had turned Mr Kumar away, saying he had no chance of survival.

But Dr Mishra and colleagues accepted the challenge. Four days after the surgery, Mr Kumar was able to walk and was allowed home.

Dr Mishra said: ‘High-speed penetrating injuries of the heart are universally fatal and this was similar to being shot in the heart by a gun.’

He added: ‘Fortunately, the metallic fragment also plugged the hole it had created.

‘That stopped the heart from a fatal haemorrhage and we were able to extract the metallic piece buried deep inside the heart.’ 

HOW DID THE PATIENT ESCAPE THE HORRIFIC INJURY WITH HIS LIFE? 

Surgeons led by Dr Vaibhav Mishra at Fortis Hospital in Noida – just outside New Delhi – performed an emergency surgery on Satish Kumar. 

They released a gruesome 90-second long clip of the operation that saved the 32-year-old, who nearly died after a horrific accident at work. 

In a desperate attempt to keep him alive, the team used forceps to dig into the heart to pull out the 4cm-long bit of metal buried ‘deep inside his heart’.

They also repaired his left ventricle – one of four vital chambers of the organ, where the bit of drill had lodged itself inside the heart of the drill operator.

Dr Mishra said: ‘High-speed penetrating injuries of the heart are universally fatal and this was similar to being shot in the heart by a gun.’

He added: ‘Fortunately, the metallic fragment also plugged the hole it had created.

‘That stopped the heart from a fatal haemorrhage and we were able to extract the metallic piece buried deep inside the heart.’ 

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