The patient, Ankur Rai, who is an IIT aspirant from Uttar Pradesh, was placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenator (ECMO), which takes over the function of heart and lungs, while the doctors at AIIMS were "prepared for the worst".
"Ankur was suffering from end-stage heart failure and needed an urgent heart transplant. At the time of admission his heart's pumping capacity had come down to just 10 per cent," Dr Sandip Sath, Professor in the department of cardiology said.
Meanwhile, Ankur's condition kept deteriorating and one day his blood pressure dropped drastically and he suffered a respiratory and cardic arrest.
"We revived him and he was put on ECMO. We began waiting for a miracle to take place and were ready for the worst," Dr Seth said.
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On the seventh day, the doctors received a called from PGI Chandigarh, but it could not materialise because of the "odd timing" of heart harvesting.
Now, Ankur is recovering on expected lines and is out of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).
"We are grateful to the doctors at AIIMS here. They managed a (harvested) heart in just seven days. Today he is alive because of them," the father of the patient said.