Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Life Saving Surgery


HEART BEATAugust 20, 2012, 7:46 p.m. ET

.Facing Lifesaving Heart Surgery, Twice

Surgeries to Save Babies Pose Problems Years Later; Adults In the Children's Ward.Article Video Comments (18) more in Health & Wellness
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By RON WINSLOW

Just a few decades ago, infants born with heart defects weren't expected to live past their teens. Improved surgery techniques have changed that, resulting in a new condition called Adult Congenital Heart Disease, and the need for cardiologists who can treat it. WSJ's Christina Tsuei reports.

.The first generation of patients to have historic, lifesaving heart surgery as newborns or children is now in their 20s and 30s and presenting doctors with a puzzle: What some thought were cures for serious heart defects are breaking down.



Symptoms can begin years or decades after the childhood operations to treat congenital defects, hitting unsuspecting patients with chest pain, shortness of breath or debilitating fatigue. Often patients need additional heart surgery to survive.



Surgery at Ages 11 and 27

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CloseMichael Stravato for Wall Street Journal



Tiffani Harrington with a staff member at Texas Children's Hospital in 1991.

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CloseMichael Stravato for Wall Street Journal



Ms. Harrington, with her son, born Friday, and daughter. She had a calcified valve replaced before her first pregnancy.

..Pediatric cardiologists and surgeons, though, aren't trained to manage adult health issues, nor are children's hospitals accustomed to treating them. Adult doctors are often stymied in diagnosing symptoms of patients whose hearts have been reconfigured by pediatric surgeons.



"These patients don't have a natural home" in the health-care system, says Charles D. Fraser Jr., surgeon-in-chief at Texas Children's Hospitals in Houston.



About 1.3 million Americans ages 21 and older—and perhaps as many as 3 million according to some estimates—are living with congenital heart defects, with 35,000 to 40,000 joining their ranks each year.



Patients are often unaware of potential problems or skip checkups that would allow doctors to track the condition of their repairs. By some estimates more than 50% of aren't getting regular heart care.



"This is a tsunami hitting the health-care system," says Amy Verstappen, president and CEO of the Adult Congenital Heart Association, a patient advocacy group.



Top centers treating adults with congenital heart disease vary in their approaches. Texas Children's, Boston Children's Hospital, and Cincinnati Children's Hospital treat adults at their institutions, while pediatric cardiac surgeon Jonathan Chen treats many of his adult patients at New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, an adult center. The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia have a hybrid program intended to help patients ease the transition between adult and pediatric medicine.



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Charles Thornton before his second heart surgery at age 15.

.To Fix Broken Hearts

Patients Who Had Childhood Surgeries Discover Those Operations May Need an Update. Some Rough Estimates:



90% of children born each year with heart defects survive until adulthood.

40% of children with heart defects are at significant risk of needing operations later in their lives.

50% of adults living with congenital heart defects are not getting regular care, according to some estimates.

WSJ reporting

.Charles Thorton, of Lafayette, La., underwent surgery in 2004, at age 38, at Texas Children's Hospital, where his family had to get permission to bring in meals—otherwise he got apple sauce and baby food. The surgery was a major revision of earlier operations he underwent at ages 2 and 15 to treat a birth defect called tricuspid atresia.



Being treated in children's hospital brought back tough memories of his experiences as a child, his wife Ann, says. Mr. Thornton recalls the emotional response of parents he met whose children were there to fix their hearts. That he was there as an adult represented "hope for their kids," he says. "I felt I was giving something to them."



Hard data are scarce, but experts say more than 90% of the estimated 40,000 children born each year with heart defects now survive until adulthood, the reverse of the situation just a few decades ago.



Defects vary widely in severity and complexity. Roughly half of people born with them don't require surgery, says Dr. Chen, chief of pediatric cardiac surgery at New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell. But about 80% of the rest are at significant risk of needing operations later in their lives, suggesting a need for frequent regular checkups to monitor their disease.



Surgery at Ages 5 and 37

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Susanna Jacobs as a child, her scar visible from an open-heart surgery to repair a congenital condition.

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Today, Ms. Jacobs, right, underwent surgery in July after feeling short of breath with a rapid heart beat. She didn't realize that as an adult she might need a follow-up operation

..Two Days in ER Limbo

Susanna Jacobs was a so-called "blue baby," a newborn with a blue tint to her skin, lips and fingernails due to insufficient oxygen in the blood. Ms. Jacobs of Philadelphia, now 37, was born with the condition tetralogy of Fallot—four defects that conspire to inhibit the flow of blood from the heart to the lungs.



In 1980 at age 5, she had an open-heart operation to repair the defect. She had regular checkups as a child and teenager but no heart problems. Doctors "never told me I would need any follow-up surgery," says Ms. Jacobs, who as an adult had a couple of heart checkups. Ms. Jacobs "exemplified the whole idea of being lost to care," says Yuli Kim, medical director of the Philadelphia Adult Congenital Heart Program, a joint-venture between Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the Hospital at the University of Pennsylvania.



Last April, 32 years after her surgery, Ms. Jacobs was at her job as a patient services representative at a pediatric dental office when her heart suddenly started beating rapidly and she felt short of breath. When symptoms persisted a second day, she went to a local emergency room. Tests detected an irregular heartbeat, an enlarged heart and a leaky pulmonary valve. For two days, she says, she was neither admitted nor discharged. "They just didn't know what to do for me," she says.



She was transferred to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, where her heartbeat was stabilized and she went home. After further evaluation by Dr. Kim and other experts, she underwent open-heart surgery in July to have her pulmonary valve replaced. The need for a second surgery came as a shock, says Ms. Jacobs. Now, she says she realizes that "I'm never going to be finished with issues of my heart."



Strong Enough for Pregnancy?

Tiffani Harrington, 32, was born with transposition of the great arteries: Vessels connected to her left ventricle, intended to deliver blood to the body, and her right ventricle, which pumps blood to the lungs, were reversed. She has been a patient at Texas Children's since she was five months old and had an open-heart "arterial switch" to repair the problem in 1991 when she was 11.



A checkup in 2007 turned up evidence that her pulmonary artery was calcified. She also mentioned that she hoped to have a family to Wayne Franklin, director of the adult congenital heart program at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston



About 40% of Dr. Franklin's practice are young women who are pregnant or who want to conceive. Pregnancy requires more work of the heart: Blood volume increases by 25%. And labor, with accompanying pain, fast heartbeat and hormonal changes, "that's the most dangerous and challenging time," Dr. Franklin says.



Some conditions associated with congenital heart defects, such as pulmonary hypertension, come with a mortality rate for the mother or infant as high as 50%, Dr. Franklin says. He counsels such women against having children.



He estimates about half his patients become pregnant—preferably after they take steps to reduce their risk. Ms. Harrington, of Katy, Texas, had her calcified valve replaced in late 2007. About two years later, she gave birth to a daughter, now 2½ years old.



Last year Ms. Harrington and her husband decided they'd like another baby. "We asked him if my heart was OK to handle another pregnancy," she says. "He gave us the greenlight."



She had her second baby Friday. A few days before the birth, she had a fetal echocardiogram, which indicated her new baby's heart was free of problems. The chance that a mother with a congenital heart defect will give birth to a child with one is about 8 in 100, or nearly 10 times that of women with normal hearts. (For men with a heart defect, the rate is about 4 in 100 births.)



"Thankfully both babies have perfect hearts," she says.



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JoAnn McGuinness with Jonathan Chen, who performed her 2009 heart surgery.

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JoAnn McGuinness with Denton Cooley, who performed her childhood heart surgery in 1972.

.Too Tired to Push a Grocery Cart

JoAnn McGuinness, now 48 years old, was a patient of Denton Cooley, one of the icons of open-heart surgery, who operated on her when she was 8 to repair defects associated with tetralogy of Fallot.



Her family flew from New Jersey to Texas in 1972, the year she finally reached 40 pounds, a weight thought necessary at the time to be strong enough to survive an open-heart operation.



Once the procedure was over, "I was perfect," she says. That is what her mother told her. After graduating from college, she began seeing an adult family doctor, but her mother made her promise to never see another cardiologist. "She told me all they want to do is cut you open."



But by age 32, soon after her mother died, she began having serious heart palpitations. She saw two cardiologists. Then the problem subsided. In early 2009, during a routine checkup with a new cardiologist, she learned more about tetralogy of Fallot—including the fact the hardly anyone born with the condition survived to her age. That led to more tests which revealed she had a leaky valve that caused her heart to work so hard she was nearly in heart failure, she says.



By that fall she would get so exhausted she couldn't push a grocery cart. She got an appointment with Dr. Chen at Weill/Cornell, who told her he knew exactly what to do. In November 2009, he replaced her valve at Weill/Cornell.



She's doing well with her new valve and says she realizes in retrospect that she lived through symptoms for years that she just chalked up to getting older.



Now, she wonders what lies ahead, as few people her age have gone down this road before. "It's hard to have people say they don't know what's going to happen," she says.



Write to Ron Winslow at ron.winslow@wsj.com



Corrections & Amplifications

Amy Verstappen is president and CEO of the Adult Congenital Heart Association. An earlier version of this article gave the organization's name incorrectly as the Adult Congenital Heart Disease Association, and also spelled tetralogy of Fallot, a congenital heart defect, incorrectly.





Sunday, August 19, 2012

Gobind best friend Zach moves out 2012

Gobind's best friend of 5 years Zach like his best cousin Nihal is moving out of town. The poor guy is feeling shattered.








Saturday, August 18, 2012

Two Great Stories With Brilliant Ending- The making of Great Men

Two Great Stories With Brilliant Ending

Shiv landed in Chicago and stayed there for two years stint with University of Chicago for pursuing his MBA studies. I came across the se stories which I reproduce below:

YOU NEED TO READ BOTH STORIES


STORY NUMBER ONE

Many years ago, Al Capone virtually owned Chicago . Capone wasn't famous for anything heroic. He was notorious for enmeshing the windy city in everything from bootlegged booze and prostitution to murder.

Capone had a lawyer nicknamed "Easy Eddie." He was Capone's lawyer for a good reason.. Eddie was very good! In fact, Eddie's skill at legal maneuvering kept Big Al out of jail for a long time.

To show his appreciation, Capone paid him very well. Not only was the money big, but Eddie got special dividends, as well. For instance, he and his family occupied a fenced-in mansion with live-in help and all of the conveniences of the day.. The estate was so large that it filled an entire Chicago City block..

Eddie lived the high life of the Chicago mob and gave little consideration to the atrocity that went on around him.

Eddie did have one soft spot, however. He had a son that he loved dearly. Eddie saw to it that his young son had clothes, cars, and a good education. Nothing was withheld. Price was no object.

And, despite his involvement with organized crime, Eddie even tried to teach him right from wrong. Eddie wanted his son to be a better man than he was.

Yet, with all his wealth and influence, there were two things he couldn't give his son; he couldn't pass on a good name or a good example..

One day, Easy Eddie reached a difficult decision. Easy Eddie wanted to rectify wrongs he had done.He decided he would go to the authorities and tell the truth about Al "Scarface" Capone, clean up his tarnished name, and offer his son some semblance of integrity. To do this, he would have to testify against The Mob, and he knew that the cost would be great. So, he testified.

Within the year, Easy Eddie's life ended in a blaze of gunfire on a lonely Chicago Street .. But in his eyes, he had given his son the greatest gift he had to offer, at the greatest price he would ever pay.. Police removed from his pockets a rosary, a crucifix, a religious medallion, and a poem clipped from a magazine.

The poem read:

"The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop, at late or early hour. Now is the only time you own. Live, love, toil with a will. Place no faith in time. For the clock may soon be still."



STORY NUMBER TWO

World War II produced many heroes. One such man was Lieutenant Commander Butch O'Hare.

He was a fighter pilot assigned to the aircraft carrier Lexington in the South Pacific.

One day his entire squadron was sent on a mission. After he was airborne, he looked at his fuel gauge and realized that someone had forgotten to top off his fuel tank.

He would not have enough fuel to complete his mission and get back to his ship.

His flight leader told him to return to the carrier. Reluctantly, he dropped out of formation and headed back to the fleet.

As he was returning to the mother ship, he saw something that turned his blood cold; a squadron of Japanese Aircraft was speeding its way toward the American Fleet.

The American fighters were gone on a sortie, and the fleet was all but defenseless. He couldn't reach his squadron and bring them back in time to save the fleet.Nor could he warn the fleet of the approaching danger. There was only one thing to do. He must somehow divert them from the fleet.

Laying aside all thoughts of personal safety, he dove into the formation of Japanese planes.. Wing-mounted 50 caliber's blazed as he charged in, attacking one surprised enemy plane and then another. Butch wove in and out of the now broken formation and fired at as many planes as possible until all his ammunition was finally spent.

Undaunted, he continued the assault. He dove at the planes, trying to clip a wing or tail in hopes of damaging as many enemy planes as possible, rendering them unfit to fly.

Finally, the exasperated Japanese squadron took off in another direction.

Deeply relieved, Butch O'Hare and his tattered fighter limped back to the carrier.

Upon arrival, he reported in and related the event surrounding his return. The film from the gun-camera mounted on his plane told the tale. It showed the extent of Butch's daring attempt to protect his fleet. He had, in fact, destroyed five enemy aircraft. This took place on February 20, 1942, and for that action Butch became the Navy's first Ace of W.W.II, and the first Naval Aviator to win the Medal of honor.

A year later Butch was killed in aerial combat at the age of 29. His home town would not allow the memory of this WW II hero to fade, and today, O'Hare Airport in Chicago is named in tribute to the courage of this great man.

So, the next time you find yourself at O'Hare International, give some thought to visiting Butch's memorial displaying his statue and his medal of Honor. It's located between Terminals 1 and 2.

SO WHAT DO THESE TWO STORIES HAVE TO DO WITH EACH OTHER?

Butch O'Hare was "Easy Eddie's" son. Easy eddies full name was Edward J O'Hare.




Shiv graduating from University of Chicago.



S

Thursday, August 16, 2012

A Sikh from Multan- 1947 Partition Archive

Unusual origins – A Sikh from Multan
Interview on Aug 05 2011

By Reena Kapoor

Camera, Lighting by Iram Nawaz

We interviewed Mr. Preet Mohan Singh Kapoor on August 5th 2011 in his San Ramon, CA home. Mr. Kapoor had graciously agreed to give us his time and share his family’s experiences and story. Iram Nawaz and I arrived a few minutes early to set up and get started. Pretty soon we were listening to Mr. Kapoor’s vivid descriptions of pre-partition life in the Lyallpur, Multan (now in Pakistan); and then he recounted how his family moved, just before partition, to Faridkot and Delhi and finally settled in Panipat after partition was announced.

Mr. Kapoor relied on his own remarkable young memory, as well as on accounts from family members that he had heard repeated over the years. All of us with parents or other older family members who encountered partition know exactly what this means – you grow up hearing the stories of partition over and over again and pretty soon they are ingrained in your psyche as if you had been there.

Mr. Kapoor was only three years old when his entire extended family decided to leave their ancestral home in the Multan region and move initially to Faridkot (India). They were unusual in that there were very few Sikhs in Multan; in fact Mr. Kapoor is still unique as a Sikh in that he speaks a little Multani (language). In the summer of 1947, partition had not yet been announced but the air was rife with talk of trouble. Many people like Mr. Kapoor's family left their homes thinking that once political negotiations were settled and communal tensions calmed, they would be able to return home. But that was not to be. Partition was announced only a few months later and in August 1947 all hell broke loose. Mr. Kapoor never went back.

Eventually the whole family resettled in Panipat and started a new life there. Mr. Kapoor recounted many incredible challenges they faced in their efforts to restart their lives; there was no running water or even electricity for many years in their home. It was inspiring to hear these stories and appreciate – as I have come to over the years – the strength and resilience of dislocated survivors to rebuild their lives from scratch. I thank Mr. Kapoor for welcoming us into his home, taking time out of his schedule and sharing these stories with us.

It is inspiring, enlightening – and sometimes incredibly saddening – to conduct these interviews and listen to these extraordinary stories. All in all I feel lucky to have this opportunity. But sometimes during these serious encounters there are also moments of hilarity and lightness. In an effort to capture these accounts with excellent quality audio and video we insist that we find a quiet room where we can interview our subjects uninterrupted. This was the case with Mr. Kapoor as well, which he and his wife fully accommodated. However during the interview we did have some close calls, which in retrospect were quite funny. At one point their son entered the home singing loudly, but quickly caught himself and we were able to recover and go on. And then right smack in the middle of the interview we heard loud cackling from the next room followed by high pitched “Hello, hello, hello” like someone was making prank phone call. Iram and I both looked at each other in horror. I continued the interview but Iram, my intrepid and smart partner, walked over to the next room and then came back apparently having quieted things down. We did not hear these sounds again and I continued on wondering what had happened. Once the interview ended Iram said with a twinkle, “Mr. Kapoor your parrot was quite a challenge…”, which is when I realized it was the talking bird that had interrupted us. Mr. Kapoor said, “Yes he loves to talk to anyone walking by the window!”. We could not help but burst out laughing.

Note: Mr. Preet Mohan Singh Kapoor is not related to Reena Kapoor.