MAKKAH: A specialized team from Makkah’s King Abdullah Medical City has successfully performed an emergency cardiac catheterization procedure to save the life of an Iranian pilgrim on Saturday, the Saudi Ministry of Health said. In a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency early Sunday, the ministry said that the Hajj pilgrim was taken to the hospitals emergency department when he complained of severe chest pain while he was on his way to the Grand Mosque in Makkah to perform prayers. A digital copy of the Iranian pilgrims Hajj tag, shared on social media by Ekhbariyah TV. The patient was identified in his Hajj tag as Hussain Qasimi Jalmrazy, from Isfahan in central Iran. Specialists performed an urgent diagnostic catheterization after examination results "showed the presence of blockage of more than two arteries in the heart," according to the Health Ministry. فيديو | إنقاذ حاج إيراني من ذبحة صدرية خلال توجهه إلى الحرم المكي #الإخبارية pic.twitter.com/O6WD43Hy5a — قناة الإخبارية (@alekhbariyatv) July 2, 2022 The medical team offered to perform an open heart operation, but the patient refused this medical procedure. It was then decided to insert stents instead in the damaged arteries, enabling the patient to recover and continue his pilgrimage, the statement said. King Abdullah Medical City, with full the support from the Saudi government, offers specialized health care for all Hajj and Umrah pilgrims. A million Muslims from around the world will perform the Hajj this year, up from only 60,000 vaccinated pilgrims in 2021 and a symbolic 1,000 pilgrims in 2020 at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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