Newswise — ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Edward L. Bove didn’t know he was hitting a major milestone this spring, but the world-renowned pediatric cardiac surgeon performed his 10,000th surgery on March 27 at the University of Michigan’s C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital. At the time, Bove, M.D., was not aware of the significance of that procedure, which was an aortic valve replacement. But later a departmental administrator was going over some paperwork and noted the 10,000th milestone.

“It’s pretty remarkable. You don’t go through your days counting up the procedures, so I was surprised,” says Bove, who learned of the milestone at a surprise party organized by his colleagues and staff.

“When I heard that, I thought that’s really a lot. But this is what I always wanted to do. I don’t think of this as a job. It’s a privilege.”

On Saturday, at the biennial reunion for all University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children’s Congenital Heart Center patients, Bove was honored by his patients, staff and colleagues. More than 900 registered to attend the “We Got the Beat” event, most of them patients of Bove and his colleagues in the U-M Congenital Heart Program.

Bove also is the Helen F. and Marvin M. Kirsh professor of cardiac surgery at the University of Michigan and is the first chair of the U-M Department of Cardiac Surgery, a department established this year.

C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital recently was ranked fourth in the nation for pediatric heart surgery according to U.S. News & World Report’s 2012-13 Best Children’s Hospitals rankings.

C.S. Mott’s Congenital Heart Center performs over 850 cardiac operations each year -- from the most common to the most complex. As an international referral center for children with complex congenital heart problems, U-M has one of the largest congenital heart programs in the United States.

Bove has much to do with the success of that program. He joined the faculty at U-M in 1985, after completing residencies with the U-M Medical School in 1976 and 1977. At U-M, along with touching thousands of families, he’s trained more than 36 surgeons to follow in his footsteps. “That Dr. Bove has performed his 10,000th case at the C. S. Mott Children’s Hospital at the University of Michigan is not only an incredible accomplishment for an individual surgeon, but it is amazing to think about all of the children that have benefited over the years from Dr. Bove’s remarkable skills,” says Richard G. Ohye, M.D., Head, Section of Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital.

“It is due to the work of people like Dr. Bove, and the rest of our team at the Congenital Heart Center, that there are now estimated to be over 1 million survivors of childhood congenital heart disease.”

The University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center also has established a tribute to Bove’s remarkable legacy: The Edward L. Bove, M.D., Endowed Professorship in Cardiac Surgery.

“Almost every day for 26 years, Dr. Bove has given the families of children with congenital heart defects hope,” says Richard L. Prager, section head of adult cardiac surgery and a director of U-M’s Cardiovascular Center.

“In fact, because of Dr. Bove and his colleagues, these incredibly complex pediatric cardiac surgeries have now become almost routine. We hope this professorship can honor that legacy.”

For more information on the professorship, go to www.umcvc.org/bove.

Bove agrees that in his career, pediatric cardiac surgery has advanced so much that survival is no longer the mark of success.

“The real mark now is to see how they are twenty years later. We now know we can help so many children, but our challenge is to make sure we continue to improve on the quality of their lives well after the surgery,” Bove says.

About U-M C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital: C.S. Mott moved to a new home in December 2011. The $754 million hospital features a 1.1 million square foot, 348-bed facility that is home to Mott Children’s Hospital, the Von Voigtlander Women’s Hospital, and adult and pediatric blood and marrow transplant programs. The new hospital features a 12-story inpatient tower and 9-story clinic tower, a dedicated pediatric emergency department, an on-site Ronald McDonald House, and private rooms. The new hospital also offers a new and larger home for specialty services not offered anywhere else in Michigan for newborns, children and pregnant women.

To learn more about C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital, visit www.mottchildren.org