If the Titanium heart was ok for 100 days, why not continue with it, and not get the transplant heart at all?
All self-contradictory science of organ transplants, WHICH NEVER WORK IN THE RECIPIENT.
An Australian man has become the first person in the world to live outside a hospital with a titanium artificial heart known as BiVACOR. He lived with the device for 100 days before receiving a donor heart and is now recovering well.
Developed by Dr. Daniel Timms, the BiVACOR uses a magnetically levitated rotor to pump blood through the body — featuring just one moving part, making it far more durable than traditional mechanical hearts.
The groundbreaking surgery was performed by doctors at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Sydney, with Dr. Joseph G. Rogers and his team at the Texas Heart Institute leading parallel trials in the United States.
This innovation marks a major step forward in treating severe heart failure, offering new hope to patients awaiting transplants — and potentially paving the way for a permanent artificial heart in the future.