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January
- March, 2003 |
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Cardiac
Back in Circulation
Arriving home one cold, snowy December day, Don Maples and his family did not
know a procedure he had gone through just a couple of months before would help
save their lives.
Buckled up in the car with their two sons, the Mapleses drove down an
ice-covered highway in the middle of a storm. As they slowed to help a car that
had gone into a ditch, another car slid the highway and struck their car head
on. Don Maples lost consciousness briefly. When he awoke, he saw his wife Linda
leaning forward with her head on the steering wheel looking very pale and
lifeless.
Not knowing the condition of his two sons in the back seat, Don went through a
time of intense struggle. He got out and tried to pry the driver's side door
open; but it was smashed in tight. Don started a long walk up the highway to get
help, not knowing that he himself had four broken ribs and a bruised sternum.
His efforts led to help and rescue for all the members of his family.
Doctors told Don that his hike in the snow was the biggest test that he could
have taken to see how strong his heart was. Just a few months earlier, Don had
gone through a new state-of-the-art procedure called enhanced external counter
pulsation, EECP.
EECP is a procedure that causes blood to flow from the legs back up to the
heart. The patient puts on spandex pants and lies on a machine for about an
hour, while blood is compressed sequentially with the patient’s heartbeat. This
is an alternative for patients who are experiencing angina pain and who may not
be candidates for surgery.
St. John’s cardiologist
Paul Freiman, M.D., explains that this treatment is
successful for some angina patients and is being researched for further
advancement.
“At this time EECP is indicated for angina,” Freiman said. “In the future,
studies may indicate treatment for things such as congestive heart failure, but
for now this procedure will allow people to resume active lifestyles.”
Don says he used to live with continual pain in his chest and was always tired.
An average day for him was sitting in his recliner with his remote control in
hand. Occasionally he would get up to get the mail, but that was so exhausting
to him he couldn’t do it often. Don had a heart attack in 1999, three
angiograms, and because he was a diabetic he is not a candidate for surgery.
“I had no other option so I said I would agree to do EECP,” Don said. “I was
willing to do anything to get rid of the pain. I was skeptical and very nervous.
When you first go in to do a procedure there is a room full of doctors and
nurses, and that can be very intimidating.”
The EECP patient wears spandex pants with pressurized cuffs in the calves,
thighs, and buttocks, which create a squeezing sensation that helps pump blood
back up to the heart and alleviates some of the blockage in the arteries, says
St. John’s Nursing Assistant Scott McFall.
“I thought the pants were too small at first, and said I would do it once, but
that was all, never again,” Don laughs.
McFall says the nursing staff really tries to keep patients coming back so the
procedure will work. He adds that if the patient only takes one or two
treatments the procedure will not do any good.
"It can be boring lying on a table for an hour, so we try to keep the patients
entertained," McFall says. "We really have the opportunity to talk and get close
to the patients, and that gives us the chance to find out what is going on in
their lives."
Linda says she was not the only one who could tell an immediate difference in
her husband’s life.
"Even the people at church would comment about how Don would start laughing and
joking when he never did that before," Linda says.
Don quickly decided one treatment wasn’t enough, and went through treatment five
days a week for seven weeks. He says the treatment went quickly and the
atmosphere the nurses provided allowed him to relax.
"Scott (McFall) would check my blood sugar after every treatment," Don says. "He
would never let me go until I had had a cracker or something to get my blood
sugar back up. The St. John’s nurses really care about you."
Don was the first person to go through and finish the EECP procedure. He has
attended the first support group in the nation for EECP patients.
The Mapleses are excited and believe that this medical breakthrough is a
technological advancement that people need to know about.
"It totally changed me," Don says. "It made me feel a whole lot better and now I
can do things I wouldn’t do before like go to Silver Dollar City and even
grocery shop with my wife."
Don says EECP gave him a new lease on life.
"That machine saved my life in two ways," Don says. "It gave me better physical
condition, but it also gave me quality of life that I can spend with my family.
That car accident was a test and if it were not for EECP I would not have
passed.”
Don says this procedure is not a cure and he still takes medication, but he
doesn't have the pain he had before.
Linda is thankful everyday for the procedure and the impact it has made on their
family.
"I would wake up in the middle of the night to make sure he was breathing. I
would call during the day and check on him always being afraid to go anywhere or
to leave him by himself,” she says. “I don't worry about him now."
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