U.S. vice President Dick Cheney planned to work from home Monday while recuperating from surgery to repair aneurysms on the back of both knees.
Spokesman Steve Schmidt said the vice president was doing well after the procedure on Saturday.
Cheney walked slowly out of George Washington University Hospital late Sunday morning with his wife, Lynne, at his side. He shook hands with doctors and then went to his motorcade without any assistance, although not at his normally brisk pace.
Cheney was under local anesthesia during the six-hour surgery.
An aneurysm is a ballooning weak spot in an artery that can eventually can burst if left untreated. Cheney's aneurysms, known as popliteal aneurysms, were discovered during his annual physical in July.
The vice president had been scheduled to have only the right knee operated on Saturday and the other later, but during the surgery his doctors decided to do both at once, Schmidt said. There were no complications.
Cheney had flexible stent grafts put in his knee arteries. During the procedure, the stent graft is threaded through a catheter inserted in the femoral artery at the groin down to the aneurysm site. Fully opened, it serves as a little tube inside the artery, keeping the rushing blood from touching the weakened artery walls.
This is a newer technique for patching aneurysms, and an alternative to rerouting blood flow around the weak spot with a vein bypass, the AP reports.
Photo: CNN
Subscribe to Pravda.Ru Telegram channel, Facebook, RSS!