 |
July-September, 2003 |
|
Cardiac
Aurora resident gets back to business
thanks to St. John’s heart program in his hometown
A
year ago, Joe McCullah’s wife saved his life by arguing with him.
Sixty-nine-year-old McCullah, a real
estate broker and lifelong resident of Aurora, woke up one morning in July 2002,
showered, dressed and started to head out the door for work at his real estate
agency when his wife Lana asked him if he was feeling OK.
“I said, ‘Yes, I’m just a little tired,
but I’m OK,’” McCullah says. “She said, ‘Well, you don’t look OK.’ She grabbed
my wrist to take my pulse and said, ‘Your heart is running away with itself. You
need to go see
Sam
(Watts, M.D., McCullah’s primary care physician who practices at St. John’s
Mount Vernon clinic.) I said, ‘No, I don’t have time to go right now and I have
an appointment next week for my yearly physical. I’ll just wait and get checked
out then.’ She insisted that I go right then. So, I caved in and went – and it
probably saved my life.”
Watts performed an EKG, which revealed
an abnormal heart rhythm, and sent McCullah by ambulance to St. John’s Regional
Health Center to see St. John’s cardiologist
Ron
Smalling, M.D.
An angiogram revealed that five of McCullah’s coronary arteries were blocked,
which restricted blood flow to his heart. St. John’s cardiac surgeon
Clyde
Redmond, M.D., performed quintuple bypass surgery on McCullah two days later
on Lana’s birthday – July 26, 2002.
Less than a week after surgery, McCullah
returned home to Aurora and began making a series of lifestyle changes. He began
phase I of cardiac rehabilitation at St. John’s Heart Institute-Aurora, located
in St. John’s Hospital -
Aurora, about four weeks after returning home. Cardiac rehab is a carefully
monitored exercise program designed to make the most of functioning heart tissue
after a heart attack or bypass surgery.
“I chose to do my rehab at Aurora
because I live and work here and I’ve known a lot of the people there for years.
It’s convenient for me because in my business, I can’t always hit my appointment
right on time, and they can always accommodate me,” McCullah says.
The Aurora hospital has offered cardiac
rehab since 1985, says David Dickson, the cardiac rehab coordinator for the
facility. The hospital, along with
St. John’s Hospital -
Cassville, affiliated with St. John’s Health System in 2001. Dickson says
about 175 cardiac patients do their rehab at the Aurora hospital.
“The oldest cardiac rehab patient we
have here is 90 and the youngest is 36. Many of these patients couldn’t even do
one lap around the track when they started and have improved by leaps and bounds
since they’ve been here,” Dickson says.
Phase I of cardiac rehab consists of
light, monitored exercise with daily vital signs taken at the facility. Patients
in phase I wear a heart monitor while they exercise. After phase I, the exercise
program advances slowly and carefully. It is accompanied by education about
heart-healthy nutrition, stress reduction and smoking cessation. Many patients
leave cardiac rehab feeling far better and in better health than they were
before their heart attack or operation. Phase II of the program involves an
increase in intensity in exercise and lasts about three months.
McCullah, who prefers to wear his cowboy
boots when he works out, is in phase III of the
program, which is the last phase and is a maintenance program. He walks the
track and treadmill, rides the stationary bike and works out with weights.
Cardiac rehab staff take his vital signs once a week.
McCullah comes to Springfield to see
Smalling, his cardiologist, about every three months. He thinks Smalling will
tell him during his next visit they can increase the length between visits to
six months.
At the direction of Smalling and Watts,
McCullah recently stopped taking Coumadin, a blood thinner, which he had taken
since his surgery. He continues to take medication for heart arrhythmia.
“Dr. Smalling is even considering taking
me off that, if everything keeps going as well as it has been,” McCullah says.
Lifestyle Changes
Less than a week after surgery, McCullah
returned home to Aurora and began making a series of lifestyle changes. The
first change he made was reducing the amount of red meat in his diet.
“I love red meat. I could make a meal
out of a steak, baked potato and a salad. I could eat that at least once a day.
Now, I eat a steak maybe every other week. I eat chicken and fish and some pork
now, but nothing with skin and nothing fried. Everything’s grilled,” he says.
The next major lifestyle change for
McCullah was selling his real estate agency, Reliable Real Estate, where he was
the primary broker.
“I am attempting to slow down. It’s hard
to do because I’ve been in business so long. In January, I sold to Century 21
but have stayed on as a broker so I can still take care of my clients. I try to
keep my work week limited to four days a week – I take Thursdays, Saturdays and
Sundays off. I also hired an assistant, Carol Strahley, who has really helped me
stay organized and has reduced my stress level at the office,” he says.
Before his surgery, the McCullahs had
sold their multilevel home in town and moved to a single-story house on the
outskirts of Aurora. The country setting and single story aided in McCullah’s
recovery, he says.
“The new home has walk-in showers and is
all on one floor. I would have had quite a problem, I think, trying to negotiate
the steps in the old house after my surgery. It was a very fortunate move. My
wife also took great care of me after my surgery,” McCullah says.
Heart Attack Warning Signs
Know the warning signs of cardiac
distress. Call your physician if you are experiencing any of the following
symptoms.
• chest discomfort or pain
• rapid heartbeat, palpitations or
change in heart rhythm or rate
• discomfort in your neck, jaws, teeth,
shoulders, arms, and/or back
• ache, burning, pressure, indigestion
or heaviness
• discomfort that is isolated or
radiates to other areas
• severe lightheadedness or dizziness
• new or different discomfort in calf of
leg when walking
• excessive swelling of legs or ankles
• persistent fatigue or decreased
tolerance of activity
• unexplained or progressive shortness
of breath
St. John’s Cardiac Rehab Locations
St. John’s began offering cardiac rehab nearly 20 years ago.
St. John’s offers cardiac rehab in:
• Branson
• Monett
• St. Robert
• Mountain View
• Cassville
• Lebanon
• Berryville, Ark.,
• Springfield –
St. John’s Hammons Heart
Institute on the
St. John’s campus and
St. John’s Northwest Health
Services,
2120 W. Kearney
|