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TEXT ON SCREEN: December 2, 1982

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 12-2-82): FRANK REYNOLDS: Barney Clark, 61 years old, a retired dentist. Not long ago, he told a friend, โ€œIf I can do something for mankind, I will.โ€

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 12-2-82):
DAN RATHER: Today, he made medical history as the first human to receive a permanent artificial heart.

NARRATION: In December of 1982, doctors at the University of Utah removed a diseased and ailing heart from the chest of Barney Clark.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 12-2-82): CHASE PETERSON (VP HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER): His heart was really not pumping. It was just almost quivering.

NARRATION: They replaced it with a man-made device โ€“ the Jarvik 7 artificial heart.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 11-24-84): DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: It goes right where your heart would go in your chest.

NARRATION: Clark survived the surgery, and the heart was hailed as a breakthrough in the fight against heart disease.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 3-24-83): DOCTOR: The artificial heart is, in some important ways, stronger than the natural heart.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: I thought it was going to help a lot of people. I thought it was going to immediately take off.

NARRATION: But complications with the artificial heart led to questionsโ€ฆ

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 05-08-85): REPORTER: Does it cause dangerous clots?

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 11-20-85): DAN RATHER: Is the cost in suffering too high?

NARRATION: More than three decades later, heart disease is still the leading cause of death in America. Did the device inspire artificial hope or real change?

LANCE WHITE: If you want to take out something thatโ€™s bad and put something good in there, thatโ€™s a win-win for everybody.

A CHANGE OF HEART

ARCHIVAL (12-2-82):
HELEN KEE (NURSING SERVICES DIRECTOR): At seven minutes after midnight the heart was removed.

NARRATION: Barney Clark was near death when doctors rushed him into surgery. He had end stage congestive heart failure and was out of options.

ARCHIVAL: DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: He was too old for a transplant. He had no drugs that would help him. And the only thing he had to look forward to was dying.

NARRATION: Days earlier, Clark had agreed to have his heart replaced by a man made one as part of an experimental study led by heart surgeon William DeVries.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES (PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR, ARTIFICIAL HEART PROJECT): Most people would say, โ€˜I want to live longer,โ€™ but he said, โ€œI want to do something that may help the people that come after me.

NARRATION: The pioneering surgery lasted 7-and-a-half hours.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: The whole teamโ€™s up there. We wait โ€˜til the heart stops, and then we put the heart in him, and then the heart starts beating. And weโ€™re all excited. I mean, it was intense, let me tell you. Every fiber of my being was on full alert.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 12-3-82): TOM BROKAW: Barney Clark is doing just fine tonight. But heโ€™s not out of the woods yet.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 12-3-82): REPORTER: Heโ€™s breathing on his own and has spoken his first words since surgery. DOCTOR: He wanted a glass of water.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: When he woke up, he said, โ€œI, I, Iโ€”This feels good. Iโ€™m glad Iโ€™m beating.โ€ And then he looked at his wife and she leaned down, and he said, โ€œI want to tell you that even though I donโ€™t have a heart, I still love you.โ€ Andโ€ฆ There wasnโ€™t a dry eye in the house.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 3-2-83): DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: What does it feel like to have an artificial heart in the chest? Do you have pain or is it uncomfortable? BARNEY CLARK: Not at all. Itโ€™s feelsโ€ฆItโ€™s comfortable.

NARRATION: The heart inside Barney Clark was called the Jarvik 7, named after its lead inventor, Dr. Robert Jarvik.

DR. ROBERT JARVIK: We always have thought that itโ€™s clearly a benefit to the patient to do this.

NARRATION: The Jarvik 7 was made up of two pumping chambers attached by velcro and powered by a large external air compressor.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 1-2-82): DR. ROBERT JARVIK: We believe it will serve a very large number of patients that cannot be reached with heart transplants. There just plain arenโ€™t enough donors.

NARRATION: There are only about 2000 heart donors a year, yet tens of thousands of patients who could benefit from a transplant. The Jarvik 7 was hailed as a medical miracle and the media covered every update on Clarkโ€™s condition.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 3-2-83): TOM BROKAW: By now heโ€™s so familiar that heโ€™s just like a member of the family.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 3-2-83): DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: I think heโ€™s climbing a mountain, heโ€™s not to the summit yet.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: He had times when it was good and times it wasnโ€™t good. He had trouble breathing.

ARCHIVAL (NBC, 12-14-82): DOCTOR: Five hours into the 13th day of the artificial heart, Dr. Clark had a sudden drop in blood pressureโ€ฆ

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: He was mainly bound in the hospital, but he could do more things with the heart than he could without the heart.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 3-24-83): UNA LOY CLARK (WIFE): This is a second chance at life for us and weโ€™re very, very grateful.

NARRATION: During that second chance, Barney Clark battled seizures, infections and more, and nearly four months after receiving the artificial heart he died.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 3-24-83): DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: His lungs failed. Next his brain failed. And lastly when the key was turned off, his heart failed.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: When he died, I said to myself, โ€˜okay, I know that everybodyโ€™s going to look at this as just an event, and looking at it as just possible chance that it worked. We need to do it again.โ€™

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 11-25-84): SAM DONALDSON: Good evening. The operation was a success. The patient is in stable condition. Thatโ€™s the word from Louisville, Kentucky tonight on William Schroeder.

NARRATION: In November of 1984, at Humana Heart Institute in Louisville, Kentucky, Dr. DeVries performed an artificial heart operation on a second dying patient โ€“ 52 year-old William Schroeder. The results were dramatic.

ARCHIVAL (SCHROEDER HOSPITAL FOOTAGE, 1984): WILLIAM SCHROEDER: Fantastic. Itโ€™s just a complete turnaround. DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: In-in how you feel, orโ€” WILLIAM SCHROEDER: I can breathe. I feel like Iโ€™ve got ten years going right now. DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: Well, we hope you do! WILLIAM SCHROEDER: Well, I really do.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES:Bill Schroeder was incredible. I mean, heโ€”They had him on television a lot. He wanted to talk to the TV because he loved talking to people.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 5-8-85): WILLIAM SCHROEDER: Who knows, maybe Iโ€™ll be the bionic man.

NARRATION: In the days following his operation, Schroeder felt good enough to tell jokes and drink a beer. He even asked President Ronald Reagan about his social security benefits.

ARCHIVAL (HOSPITAL FOOTAGE, SCHROEDER ON THE PHONE, 1984): WILLIAM SCHROEDER: I just keep on calling and keep on calling and I donโ€™t get anywhere. PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN: Well, I will get into it, and find out what this situation is.

NARRATION: He got his check the next day, but shortly after Schroeder had a stroke and his recovery stalled.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 12-14-84): REPORTER: Schroeder lost consciousness for almost an hour. He was paralyzed on his right side.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 4-8-85): REPORTER: But the major continuing deficit from the stroke is Schroederโ€™s speech. MALE: How are you feeling? SCHROEDER: [unintelligible] FEMALE: He feels real fine.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: The heart is, is something that movesโ€”the blood moves through it, and it. If you damage the blood too much, it will clot. And that was a real medical problem.

NARRATION: DeVries implanted artificial hearts in two more patients, but Schroeder outlived them both and remained the center of media attention.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 5- 8-85):
SCHROEDERโ€™S WIFE: Can you wave to everybody?

NARRATION: Schroeder had more strokes and TV cameras documented his deteriorating health.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 11-25-85): REPORTER: He can barely speak, is partially paralyzed, and often doesnโ€™t recognize his family.

NARRATION: With images like these broadcast across the nation, many began to question whether the artificial heart experiment was worth the suffering.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 11-25-85): RICHARD THRELKELD: William Schroederโ€™s been living with an artificial heart. Living, yes. But the quality of his life has not been at all as his doctors and family had planned.

ARCHIVAL (CBS, 6-19-86): DR. GEORGE ANNAS (MEDICAL ETHICIST): Theyโ€™ve proven that you can prolong the dying process. But they certainly havenโ€™t proven that you can give anyone any type of reasonable quality of life.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES: Iโ€™d turn on the news, read the newspaper, and there was really bad articles came out about this is bad โ€“ I was playing God, and I shouldโ€™ve let them die. And if I really got upset, all I had to do was walk down the hall into one of the rooms. Iโ€™d say, โ€œDo you really want us to stop?โ€™ And boy, youโ€™d say that, theyโ€™d no, none of them said, โ€œStop.โ€

NARRATION: William Schroeder lived for nearly two years with his artificial heart. But after he died in August of 1986, the Jarvik 7 went from Medical Miracle to the โ€˜Dracula of Medical Technology.โ€™ Then, 4 years later the FDA cited the heartโ€™s manufacturer for quality control and reporting violations.

ARCHIVAL (ABC, 1-11-90): PETER JENNINGS: The government has withdrawn its approval of the Jarvik artificial heart.

NARRATION: Dr. DeVries was told to destroy his remaining hearts.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES:I had a whole bunch, like about 10 of them. And I remember going into the office of the administrator of the hospital with a knife and cutting heart holes in their diaphragm so I could never use them again. That was probably the saddest day of my life.

NARRATION: His study was over, and the artificial heart faded from public view โ€“ but it didnโ€™t go away.

More than two decades later, Randy Shepherdโ€™s heart was failing so rapidly that he was in danger of dying at any moment. With no donor heart available, his doctor gave him another option โ€“ the artificial heart.

RANDY L. SHEPHERD: Iโ€™m like, well, so youโ€™re cutting my heart out of my chest and sticking, basically making me a robot. Iโ€™m like whatโ€™s Plan B? I donโ€™t want to do that.

NARRATION: But Shepherd did want to live, so he agreed to the surgery. The FDA had approved a different use for the artificial heart โ€“ not a permanent implant but a temporary bridge to transplant. It was a way to keep patients alive while waiting for a donor heart.

Shepherdโ€™s recovery from the surgery was difficult, especially mentally.

RANDY L. SHEPHERD: All of a sudden my heartโ€™s gone and Iโ€™ve got a machine in there and itโ€™s like, wow. It was just a feeling of loss of like not being a person of not being a self.

NARRATION: He lived with his artificial heart for 14 months, and now that heโ€™s had a heart transplant, he leads a normal, active life.

RANDY L. SHEPHERD:Iโ€™m running, trail running, lifting weights. So looking back at this point I can say absolutely itโ€™s worth it. Without the artificial heart I wouldnโ€™t be here. Would not have made it to transplant without the artificial heart.

DR. ZAIN KHALPEY (DIRECTOR, ARTIFICIAL HEART PROGRAM, BANNER โ€“ UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER TUCSON): Itโ€™s very exciting, because I think things that couldnโ€™t be done in the 1980โ€™s can now be done in patients who really need help.

NARRATION: Today what used to be called the Jarvik 7 is called the Syncardia Temporary Total Artificial Heart. It now comes in different sizes, so it can fit more women and children. Other than that, the device hasnโ€™t changed much since the days of Barney Clark.

DR. FRANCISCO ARABIA (SURGICAL DIRECTOR, ARTIFICIAL HEART, CEDARS-SINAI HEART INSTITUTE): We have learned how to use it.There is no doubt that a device at that time was ahead of its time. The concept was ahead of its time.

NARRATION: Doctors have learned how to control the blood clots and infections that plagued the early patients, and the artificial heart has now been used about 1600 times as a bridge to transplant.

DR. FRANCISCO ARABIA: Once the device is in and you turn it on, itโ€™s quite remarkable. They go from almost being dead to having what many people call a super heart.

NARRATION: And with the development of smaller, portable power packs, artificial heart patients can even leave the hospital and live at home while waiting for a donor heart.

LANCE WHITE: I have two dogs, so I go out and I walk in the backyard with my dogs, and I play with them. I say 99 percent of my days are great.

NARRATION: Lance White has been waiting at home for nearly two years. The machine that powers his heart weighs about 13 pounds and can be carried in a backpack.

LANCE WHITE: Most of the time Iโ€™m plugged up to the wall with that. Now if I want to go somewhere I can take it out, and I can have just this with me.

NARRATION: The machine makes a constant beating noise and is connected to the artificial heart by tubes, but heโ€™s not complaining.

LANCE WHITE: If thatโ€™s the price I have to pay so to speak to do another 40, 50 years, to watch my kids grow up, to have grandkids, thatโ€™s easy.

NARRATION: With the success of the artificial heart as a bridge to transplant, doctors see a future once again for the device as a permanent implantโ€ฆ this time with the benefit of modern medical care.

DR. ZAIN KHALPEY: The FDA have approved a trial, which allows this total artificial heart to be the complete substitute for a heart transplant. And thatโ€™s called a bridge to a destination. Which means that this will stay with you until you die.

NARRATION: At the Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, the very first patient in the trial recently received a permanent artificial heart – the first since doctors operated on Barney Clark, William Schroeder and others three decades ago.

DR. ROBERT JARVIK:I think thereโ€™s undeniable evidence now thatโ€™s itโ€™s been a big success in the long term.

DR. WILLIAM DEVRIES:It works great. And theyโ€™ve had electric hearts, and theyโ€™ve had all kinds of things that say, โ€œThis is better and better,โ€ but this heart is the only one thatโ€™s really been used consecutively all that time and itโ€™s withstanded 30, 40 years now.

(END)