5 Things That Heal Slowly: How TECS Revolutionizes Heart Surgery Recovery
5 Things in Your Body That Heal Slower Than You Think (And How Totally Endoscopic Cardiac Surgery [TECS] Avoids One of Them)
We often assume the human body is a rapid self-repair machine. Cut your finger, it heals in a week. Break a bone, it’s fixed in a couple of months. While our biology is miraculous, some tissues and components take far longer to return to 100% than most people realize.
Understanding these slow-mending parts is key to appreciating contemporary medical breakthroughs, especially a method known as Totally Endoscopic Cardiac Surgery (TECS).
TECS is the most highly specialized, truly minimal approach to heart surgery, distinguished by one critical characteristic: it preserves the chest’s breastbone anatomy. This article will show how this surgical innovation is avoiding the body’s greatest recovery obstacle.
Here are five structures that require significant time to mend – and how one unique surgical technique completely bypasses the most restrictive one.
1. Cartilage (The Shock Absorbers)
- Why it’s slow: Cartilage (like in your knees, elbows or spinal discs) has no direct blood supply. It relies on the diffusion of nutrients from surrounding joint fluid.
- Healing Timeline: Damage can take months to years to resolve, and often never fully regenerates its original structure.
2. Tendons (The Connectors)
- Why it’s slow: Tendons connect muscle to bone (like the Achilles or rotator cuff). They have a limited blood supply and require careful, prolonged immobility and rehabilitation after injury or surgery.
- Healing Timeline: Full recovery from a severe tendon tear or complex repair often takes 6 to 12 months of dedicated physical therapy.
3. Nerves (The Wiring)
- Why it’s slow: While the central nervous system (brain/spinal cord) is extremely limited in its ability to repair, peripheral nerves can regenerate, but it’s excruciatingly slow – about 1 millimeter per day.
- Healing Timeline: A deep cut damaging a peripheral nerve can take many months to restore sensation and movement, as the nerve fiber has to slowly regrow the entire distance.
4. Spinal Discs (The Spongy Cushioning)
- Why it’s slow: Like cartilage, discs lack a rich blood supply and are under constant, compressive pressure, making consistent repair difficult.
- Healing Timeline: Damage to the outer ring of a disc can take 6 months or more to stabilize, often leading to chronic pain if healing is incomplete.
5. The Breastbone (Sternum) – The Shield
- Why it’s slow: This is the large, flat bone in the center of your chest. While bone generally heals faster than cartilage, the sternum is a weight-bearing, crucial structural component.
- Healing Timeline: Following a traditional full-open heart procedure (sternotomy), the sternum must be wired together. For the bone to fully fuse and heal, patients are placed on restrictive sternal precautions for 6 to 12 weeks. This dictates when you can drive, lift or push yourself out of bed.
The Innovation: How TECS Bypasses the Greatest Recovery Obstacle
In cardiac surgery, while all tissues need to heal, the need to cut the breastbone (sternotomy) creates the single biggest challenge to recovery that dictates the length of a patient’s return to normal life.
Why? Because the chest wall is the body’s shield and its stability is essential. After an open procedure, the surgeon’s focus must shift entirely to managing the recovery of this large, slow-healing bone. This dictates restrictions on patient activities, such as when they can resume driving, lift heavy objects or push themselves up from a chair.
Compare the Difference: A traditional sternotomy incision requires healing the entire length of the breastbone, while TECS uses a minimally invasive approach.

If only there was a way to perform complex heart surgery without opening the chest!
TECS eliminates this problem. This minimally invasive, technically challenging technique is only performed by highly skilled specialists like Dr. Mario Castillo-Sang, a Cardiac Surgeon at St. Elizabeth.
TECS does not require cutting the breastbone or forcefully spreading the ribs. Instead, by navigating through the natural spaces between the ribs, TECS is performed through an incision of just 2.3 cm (less than an inch). This allows the patient to keep their chest structure strong and stable.
Dr. Castillo-Sang explains totally endoscopic cardiac surgery firsthand, watch the short video here.
The Result?
Get back to life sooner! TECS patients typically avoid the restrictive 6 to 12 week waiting period required for bone healing, leading to:
- Dramatically faster mobilization: Up to 50% faster recovery.
- Significantly less pain: Tylenol used to manage general aches and pains after discharge.
- Return to driving and lifting in weeks, not months: No need for sternal restrictions.
A Message from Dr. Mario Castillo-Sang
“We are always focused on surgical excellence, but the goal extends beyond the operating room. By preserving the patient’s primary bone structure with totally endoscopic techniques, we are essentially removing the largest physical barrier to recovery, allowing the patient to focus their energy on healing the heart, not just the bone. This is a game-changer for quality of life.”
Ready to Discuss Truly Minimal Heart Surgery?
The TECS approach is designed to give you the fastest possible return to life by avoiding the most restrictive recovery obstacle. Learn how this advanced surgical method could change your treatment journey.
Call (859) 301-9010 to schedule a consultation with Dr. Castillo-Sang or complete our online request form.


