Showing posts with label Heart Bypass Surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart Bypass Surgery. Show all posts
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Tia Pusit dies at 66
MANILA - Comedienne Tia Pusit died on Thursday night, according to her sister Nova Villa. She was 66.
Myrna Villanueva in real life, Tia Pusit passed away at 11:30 p.m. at the Philippine Heart Center in Quezon City, nearly a month after she underwent double bypass surgery.
She is survived by her four children.
Villa told ABS-CBN News that Tia Pusit endured a host of medical complications, including brain hemorrhage, since her operation last September 9. She had been in the hospital since April and was battling kidney failure and aortic aneurysm.
Funeral arrangements are still being finalized by Tia Pusit's family.
In recent months, family and friends of Tia Pusit had been raising funds for the treatment of the comedienne.
A concert scheduled on October 5, organized by Tia Pusit's close friend and colleague Inday Garutay, was to shoulder expenses of her hospitalization.
Inday Garutay, whose real name is Christopher Borja, told ABS-CBN News that the show will still push through at comedy bar Zirkoh in Quezon City, but will instead have proceeds go to the funeral of Tia Pusit.
Tia Pusit was best known for her feisty comedic roles in a career spanning more than three decades.
She was last seen in "Ikaw Lamang" as Kim Chiu's nanny and confidante. -- Report from Mario Dumaual, ABS-CBN News
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Emperor's heart bypass surgery successful, doctors report

TOKYO — Emperor Akihito underwent a successful four-hour heart bypass operation Saturday and hopefully should be fit to play tennis again, officials said amid lingering concerns over his declining health.
It was the first surgery for the 78-year-old emperor since 2003—when he had an operation for prostate cancer—after tests showed a narrowing of two of his coronary arteries.
His physicians, a team from the University of Tokyo hospital and the private Juntendo University, said the operation went without a hitch from the start at 11:01 a.m. until the end at 2:57 p.m.
The emperor was awake before he left the operating room at 3:55 p.m. for the intensive care unit.
His wife Empress Michiko and their daughter Sayako Kuroda, a former princess who left the royal household to marry a commoner, visited him about an hour after he came to the ICU and had a brief chat, the palace said.
He might be discharged in two weeks, his doctors said.
“The operation ended smoothly as planned,” Minoru Ono, surgeon at the University of Tokyo, told a news conference.
“His blood pressure is good. No bleeding is seen. His condition after the surgery is just as expected,” he said.
During his recuperation, Akihito’s first son Crown Prince Naruhito will handle official duties such as attending public ceremonies and meeting state guests.
The monarch arrived at the hospital on Friday morning accompanied by Michiko, who stayed with the emperor overnight.
Akihito walked to the operating room with his wife and daughter seeing him off at its entrance.
After his operation, the empress and Kuroda saw him briefly and rubbed his hand.
“I feel good,” the emperor told them, according to Ono.
More than 10,000 people flocked to the Imperial Palace on Saturday to sign books wishing him well at a special tent set up outside the palace gates.
Local press reports had earlier stressed the surgery was a routine procedure that thousands of Japanese undergo every year. But the surgery came amid increasing concerns about Akihito’s health.
A catheter angiogram taken a week ago showed that his arteries had continued to narrow since an examination a year ago, the palace said in a statement.
In November, Akihito, who acceded to the throne in 1989 following the death of his father Hirohito, spent 19 days in hospital with mild pneumonia and underwent surgery for prostate cancer in 2003.
The palace will continue to consider ways to reduce Akihito’s duties, said Ichiro Kanazawa, the palace’s top medical supervisor.
“Fortunately, his heart has become better, so I am hoping that he will be able to play tennis again,” he said. “But as for his work, we have to think of his age, which is not getting younger.”
source: japantoday.com
Friday, February 17, 2012
Japanese Emperor Akihito to undergo heart surgery

REPORTING FROM SEOUL -- Japan is holding its collective breath as beloved Emperor Akihito is scheduled to undergo heart bypass surgery Saturday in Tokyo.
Officials from the so-called Imperial Household Agency said a medical team from the University of Tokyo Hospital decided to operate on the 78-year-old monarch after recent tests showed that Akihito's heart condition had grown worse over the last year.
The surgery will help ensure the emperor enjoys a relatively active life, officials said.
Akihito has suffered numerous health setbacks including surgery for prostate cancer in 2003 and stress-related health issues in late 2008. He is still seen at numerous events but has cut back on his ceremonial public duties, such as offering speeches and meeting foreign dignitaries.
Despite ancient dynastic roots, the monarchy has changed with the times, to a certain extent. No longer is the emperor regarded as a living god, as was the case for centuries. Still, Akihito is a much-revered figure.
Although Japan's modern-day tabloids sometimes strike a gossipy tone when talking about members of the current royal family -- aggressively dissecting Empress Michiko's stress-related ailments, or the failure of her daughter-in-law, Crown Princess Masako, to produce a male heir -- there is rarely, if ever, a disrespectful word uttered of Akihito.
Following last year’s deadly earthquake and tsunami, Akihito delivered an unprecedented imperial pep talks to his people in which he urged calm, perseverance and solidarity in "the difficult days that lie ahead."
Akihito assumed the throne in 1989 following the death of his father, Emperor Hirohito.
After the emperor spent nearly three weeks in the hospital in 2011, Prince Akishino, who is second in line to the throne, called for debate on a retirement age for the head of state.
Under Japan's 1947 Imperial House Law, the emperor is succeeded on his death by a male relative. Crown Prince Naruhito is first in line to the throne, followed by his younger brother.
source: latimes.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
