When open-heart surgery wasn鈥檛 an option, this Florida hospital鈥檚 surgeon found another way
Esther Whitley had been feeling tired and out of breath for months before she visited her doctor. The cause was a mitral valve leak, meaning blood was flowing in the wrong direction. There was also another, more serious complication: A tumor was present on her heart, which would usually require open-heart surgery to remove. That procedure would carry risk for any patient, but at age 86, it was an impossibility for Whitley. There simply wasn鈥檛 a way to treat her safely 鈥 until there was.
Whitley was referred to Saurabh Sanon, M.D., a cardiologist and Regional Medical Director of Structural Heart Therapies at HCA West Florida. He recommended the SEATTLE procedure, which stands for The Simplified Extraction of Atrial Tumor with Targeted Loop Electricity. A special catheter was inserted into a vein in Whitley鈥檚 leg and snaked to her heart. In the three-hour surgery that took place in January of 2024, Sanon hooked one of the catheter鈥檚 loops to the tumor and then used an electrical current to cut it from the cardiac wall and cauterize the tissue behind it. Then the tumor was guided by a second loop into a 鈥渂asket鈥 on the catheter and removed. It was the first time the procedure had been performed in Florida. Whitley鈥檚 mitral valve was repaired in a subsequent procedure.
Whitley now celebrates small successes, such as being able to go to church and the grocery store without being out of breath. And she鈥檚 proud to be a part of this innovative procedure 鈥 but not just for her case.
鈥淚t is not about me,鈥 she told Tampa鈥檚 Spectrum Bay News. 鈥淚 am glad that I can tell people about it. I wish some of my relatives had had the opportunity.鈥