Coronary Bypass Surgery

Coronary Bypass Surgery

Gebze

Coronary Bypass Surgery in Gebze is available at 1 hospital in the Voumed network.

Coronary bypass surgery restores blood flow to a heart muscle that is starved by narrowed or blocked coronary arteries. The surgeon takes a healthy vessel from the chest, arm or leg and uses it to carry blood around the blockage, so the heart is supplied again and the risk of a heart attack falls. It is one of the most established and reliable heart operations in the world, and patients often travel abroad for it to reach high-volume cardiovascular teams, modern intensive care and shorter waiting times. Because it treats the underlying disease rather than a single symptom, a well-planned bypass can relieve chest pain and breathlessness for many years.

On this page

At a glance

Anaesthesia
general anaesthesia
Hospital stay
about 5 to 7 days, including 1 to 3 days in intensive care
Procedure time
usually around 3 to 6 hours, depending on the number of vessels
Recovery
walking within days; the breastbone heals over about 6 to 8 weeks
Time before flying home
usually about 2 to 3 weeks, once the surgeon confirms it is safe
Results visible
chest pain and breathlessness ease soon after recovery begins

What it is

Coronary bypass is open heart surgery used when the coronary arteries that feed the heart become so narrowed or blocked that the heart muscle no longer receives enough oxygen-rich blood, which causes chest pain and, if a vessel closes completely, a heart attack. A healthy blood vessel taken from the chest, arm or leg is connected above and below the diseased segment, creating a new route, called a bypass graft, that carries blood past the blockage to the heart muscle. Most operations bypass several vessels at once, typically two to four, and the aim is to give a poorly supplied heart a healthy blood supply again, ease symptoms and lower the long-term risk of a heart attack.

When it is recommended

Bypass is recommended when tests show that medication alone, or balloon and stent procedures, will not be enough or are not technically suitable. It is the preferred option in disease affecting several vessels at once, in serious narrowing of the vessels that supply the powerful left side of the heart, and when there is an important narrowing in the main artery feeding the left side, a pattern that carries a higher risk if left untreated. It is also chosen when previous stents have failed to control symptoms, and when a blockage occurs together with another heart problem, such as a diseased valve, that needs surgical correction at the same time. For patients with diabetes and multi-vessel disease, bypass often gives the most durable result.

How it is performed

The classic approach reaches the heart by opening the breastbone, while selected cases use smaller incisions. Healthy vessels are prepared for grafting: the internal mammary artery inside the chest is left attached to its own blood supply and redirected to the heart, while free grafts such as the radial artery from the arm or the saphenous vein from the leg are joined to the aorta and then to the artery beyond the blockage. Surgeons generally favour the internal mammary artery first because it stays open the longest, then the radial artery, then the vein. The operation is performed under general anaesthesia, so the patient is fully asleep. It can be done with a heart-lung machine while the heart is briefly stopped, or, in suitable patients, on a beating heart where only the small area being worked on is steadied. The number of grafts ranges from one to several, and the whole operation usually takes around 3 to 6 hours.

Candidacy and preparation

A suitable candidate has coronary disease confirmed on imaging and is well enough to undergo and recover from major surgery; the team weighs heart function, kidney and lung health, diabetes control and any previous stroke when planning. Preparation is arranged by the cardiologist and may include pausing certain medicines, particularly blood thinners, on medical advice, and stopping smoking well in advance to improve blood flow and lung recovery. Before surgery the function of the major organs and the stroke risk are checked, the anaesthetist reviews the full medical history, and eating and drinking stop the night before. For international patients, the case can often be assessed in advance from existing angiography images and reports, so that the plan is largely set before travel and the final in-person evaluation simply confirms it on arrival.

Recovery and planning your treatment abroad

After surgery the patient is cared for in intensive care, usually for one to three days, with drains, a temporary pacing wire, fluids and a urinary catheter that are removed step by step as recovery progresses. Patients begin sipping fluids and eating light foods early, sit up and walk within the first days, and use a firm chest cushion to support the breastbone when coughing or moving, guided by a physiotherapist. The total hospital stay is usually about 5 to 7 days. Because this is major heart surgery, it is wise to plan to stay in the destination city for roughly 2 to 3 weeks so the chest wound heals well, blood-thinning and heart medicines are stabilised and the surgeon can confirm that long flights are safe before you leave. International patient teams typically arrange interpreters, accommodation and coordinators, and follow-up continues from home by message and video, with local checks of blood tests and the wound near where you live.

Risks, safety and results

Performed by an experienced team in a properly equipped hospital, coronary bypass is a safe and highly refined operation with excellent long-term results, although, like all major surgery, it carries some risk. Possible complications include bleeding, infection of the wound or chest, irregular heart rhythms, clot formation, temporary effects on the kidney or lung, and slower healing of the breastbone, and a small risk of stroke that the team works actively to minimise. Most of these are uncommon and manageable, and the great majority of patients leave hospital with their heart far better supplied than before. The long-term result depends as much on the patient as on the surgery: not smoking, controlling blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes, taking the prescribed medicines and staying active keep the grafts open and protect the heart for many years.

Frequently asked questions

These answers are general guidance and may vary by provider. Confirm the details with the hospital you choose.

How many days will I need to stay in hospital and abroad?

The hospital stay is usually about 5 to 7 days, including one to three days in intensive care right after surgery. Because this is major heart surgery, most patients are advised to stay in the destination city for roughly 2 to 3 weeks in total, so the chest heals and the surgeon can confirm you are fit to fly home.

Will I be asleep during the operation?

Yes. Coronary bypass is performed under general anaesthesia, so you are fully asleep and feel nothing throughout. The anaesthesia team monitors you closely during the operation and as you wake up in intensive care afterwards.

When can I fly home after coronary bypass?

Most patients are advised to wait about 2 to 3 weeks before a long flight, because there is a higher risk of clots and the breastbone needs time to begin healing. The surgeon will examine you and confirm when air travel is safe; flying too soon is discouraged. Wearing compression stockings and moving your legs during the flight further lower the clot risk.

Is the operation done on a stopped or a beating heart?

Both are possible and both are safe. Many bypasses use a heart-lung machine while the heart is briefly stopped, which gives a still, clear field. In selected patients the surgeon works on a beating heart, steadying only the small area being sewn. The team chooses the safest method for your particular heart.

How long does the result last?

A well-performed bypass can relieve symptoms and protect the heart for many years, especially when the internal mammary artery is used, as it tends to stay open the longest. How long the benefit lasts depends heavily on lifestyle: not smoking and controlling blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes keep the grafts healthy.

Is there support for international patients who do not speak the local language?

Yes. International patient teams commonly provide interpreters and a coordinator who stays with you from arrival through discharge, so language is not a barrier during consultations, surgery and recovery. Your written care plan and medicine list can be provided in a language you understand.

How does follow-up work once I am back home?

You are given a clear recovery plan, a medicine schedule and warning signs to watch for, and the surgical team stays reachable for remote follow-up by message and video. Routine checks such as blood tests, wound review and adjusting blood thinners can usually be done by a cardiologist near your home, sharing results with the surgical team.

Not sure which hospital fits your case?

Upload your medical records and let AI match you to the right hospital.

Upload records and get matched

Available at these hospitals

Specialties

Not sure which hospital fits your case?

Upload your medical records and let AI match you to the right hospital.

Upload records and get matched