Open Heart

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Open Heart Page 43

by Jay Neugeboren

universal, 175, 289

  in the U.S. See drug industry; managed care; medical industry

  health-care workers, 166, 290

  heart

  beats per minute after surgery, 127

  ejection fraction, 3, 70, 82, 130, 131

  pounding, prior to surgery, 60

  slowing down for self-protection, 82, 246

  sound of common abnormalities, 35–36

  heart attack

  asymptomatic (silent), 25, 28–29

  author’s possible, 67, 68, 70

  depression following, 154

  early research, 92–93

  indication on an electrocardiogram, 67

  with normal cholesterol levels, 29

  risk with open-heart surgery, 44

  role of arterial plaque and inflammation, 29, 105, 255–60

  heart disease

  asymptomatic, 24–25, 28–29

  coexistence with diabetes, 28

  difficulty in diagnosis, 16, 28

  effects of prevention activities, 119

  genetic aspects, 24, 114, 250, 251, 265

  judgment skills concerning, 31, 35–36, 265–66

  mortality rates, 28, 91, 119

  progressive, 28

  risk factors: of the author, 5; effects on mortality rates, 106; exercise test as predictor, 30; fetal environment and infant weight, 30; relative to total incidence rate, 30; statistical aspects, 252

  symptoms, 5, 87

  treatment of symptoms vs. causes, 87

  heart-lung machine, 4, 13, 277–80

  heart surgery. See coronary bypass; heart transplant; open-heart surgery

  heart transplant, 95, 277, 281

  Helfant, Rich

  childhood and adolescence, 7, 12, 72, 235, 237–40

  as a consultant: after surgery, 123–24, 130–31, 132, 136; on diagnosis of viral infection, 28, 71, 247; on the EKG, 81, 248; on Peyronie’s disease, 136; prior to surgery, 7–8, 59, 65–66, 71–72, 79, 81, 244–49

  education, 12, 72, 239, 240, 241–43

  family, 72, 128, 237–38, 239, 240, 241

  family history, 241

  friendship with the author, 12, 72–73, 124–27, 201–2, 238–39

  heart disease research, 8, 131, 257, 258, 263

  interests, 72–73, 263–64

  motivation to be a cardiologist, 242, 267

  views: on clinical trials, 176; on determination of “normal” cholesterol levels, 29; on the human genome project, 114; on the importance of listening, 93, 101, 244; on Jackie Robinson, 235–37; on Jerry Friedland, 46; on limitations of medical knowledge, 15–17, 249, 252, 260; on medical community conflicts of interest, 37, 261–62; on the mind-body connection, 264–65; on the physician-patient relationship, 163–64, 265–66

  writings by, 16, 28, 73, 296

  Helicobacter pylori, 260, 268

  Herrick, James, 92

  highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART), 40–41, 255, 282–83

  Hippocrates, 40, 159

  Hippocratic Rule, 162

  historical background

  ancient healing practices, 158–59

  antibiotics, 94, 109, 270–71

  aspirin and blood clotting ability, 70

  clinical science, 168–69

  decrease in infant mortality, 94

  germ theory of disease, 26, 249

  heart attack research, 92–93

  heart-lung machine, 277–80

  increase in life expectancy, 94, 107–8

  Koch’s theory of disease, 249–50

  medicine prior to 1940, 86–94, 109–10

  neurology, 229–30

  rise in hospital/laboratory medicine, 167

  HIV (human immunodeficiency virus)

  antiretroviral treatment, 40–41, 255, 282–83

  epidemiology, 193–94

  infection of medical personnel, 283

  number of children infected annually, 41

  in South Africa, 282–83, 284, 285

  transmission, 186–87, 191, 193, 194, 283

  hives, 156

  Hodgkin’s disease, 5, 76–77, 135

  hormone replacement therapy, 295

  hospitals

  differences in quality of care, 10–11

  infections acquired within, 26, 255

  medical errors which occur in, 11

  shift in focus from patient to disease, 167

  human genome, 113–15, 212, 276

  Huntington’s chorea, 250, 254, 297

  Huntington’s disease, 295

  hypertension, 5, 24, 249, 251

  illness, vs. disease, 156

  Imagining Robert (Neugeboren), 19, 72, 244

  immune system

  age bias of the, 271–72

  antibodies, 255

  evolutionary context, 253, 254, 271

  vaccines and the, 156

  infant mortality, 94, 102–3, 108, 109, 181–82, 286

  infant weight, and risk of heart disease as adult, 30

  infection

  acquired in the hospital, 26, 255

  from leaking aortic valve, 36

  risk with coronary bypass, 9

  risk with open-heart surgery, 44

  infectious disease

  change in treatment with understanding of, 45

  drug-resistant, 26, 102, 255, 288

  evolutionary context, 254

  historical background: germ theory, 26, 249; treatment for childhood diseases, 88–90, 109; treatment prior to 1940, 86–94, 109–10

  impact of new treatments, 42, 109

  link with coronary artery disease, 259, 260

  reemergence, 26, 90, 102, 255

  viral. See viral infection

  inflammatory process

  in atherosclerosis, 255–60, 272

  role in the immune system, 271–72

  influenza, 91, 109, 110

  insulin, 86

  “insult accumulation,” 92

  insurance companies

  approved physicians, 39

  frustration with, 39, 100, 160, 233

  malpractice lawsuits, 289

  valuing technology over time, 88, 169–70, 175

  isolation, 82, 148, 150, 297

  Judaism

  cultural values, 45, 227

  on miracles, 85

  Yom Kippur, 219, 283

  Kanof, Dr. Abram, 240–41

  Katz, Dr. David

  author’s call to office prior to surgery, 49

  diagnosis of Aaron Neugeboren, 36

  EKG by, 59

  letter from Dr. Cabin to, 130

  letter from Dr. Flynn to, 69

  physical exam by, 55–56

  Kotker, Norman, 51

  laboratory tests

  danger of too much dependence on. See technology: vs. listening to the patient

  duplicated, variation in results, 31

  false positives, 32–33

  historical background, 167

  interpretation of results, 31, 32, 34, 248

  percent of total information needed for diagnosis, 38

  replacement of stethoscope techniques, 35–36

  language, challenges for medical care, 39

  lawsuits, 289

  legionnaires’ disease, 255

  Lescol, 29

  life

  as a gift, 22–23, 24, 83, 120–21, 129, 178–79

  quality of, 133

  life expectancy

  drug company marketing for increased, 96–98, 99

  increase in the 1900s, 94, 107–9

  research, 275–76

  vs. lifespan, 275

  Life Without Disease: The Pursuit of Medical Utopia (Schwartz), 90–91

  Li-Fraumeni cancer syndrome, 274

  Lipitor, 29, 99, 114, 132, 134–35, 260

  listening to the patient, 27

  actively, 21, 88, 93

  with compassion, 20, 212, 265–66

  for full medical history, 38, 202–3, 229, 243–44

  keeping an open mind, 16,
21

  and mental illness, 20

  vs. the “objectivity” of technology, 101

  lithium, 268, 269

  The Lost Art of Healing (Lown), 38

  Lott, Bret, 56

  Lown, Bernard, 38

  lysozymes, 271

  macrophages, 248

  Madeleine, 17

  magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), 33, 95, 231

  malaria, 102, 108, 253, 286

  malpractice lawsuits, 289

  mammograms, 118, 295

  managed care. See also drug industry; insurance companies; medical industry

  achievements, 292–93

  approved physicians, 39

  damage to patient-physician relationship by, 34–35, 159–61, 232–33

  dehumanization of physicians, 35, 87–88, 164–65

  inadequacy for chronic disease, 171, 225, 289

  need for training in new technologies, 37–38, 133

  no value placed on physician’s time, 88, 169–70, 175

  physician’s conflicts of interest with, 37, 261, 290, 293

  policy overriding physician’s judgment, 35, 160, 169, 226–27

  rise in hospital medicine, 167

  role of specialists, 35, 232–33, 292

  Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston, Mass.), 71

  matrix metalloproteinases, 248

  measles, 94, 109, 110, 286

  Medawar, P. W., 32

  media

  hype of medical “breakthroughs,” 27, 38, 45, 114–15, 133

  questionable reality on medical television show, 27

  Medical Committee for Human Rights, 189

  medical history. See patient medical history

  medical industry, 37, 261, 290, See also drug industry; managed care

  medical knowledge. See also technology of the aging process, 90

  art and science of. See under diagnosis: as an art

  of atherosclerosis, 16, 43, 249, 252, 260

  “conquest” of disease, 22, 25–26, 90–91, 96–98, 268–69

  limitations in, 15–17, 21, 26, 87–92, 249, 271

  media hype of “breakthroughs,” 27, 38, 45, 114–15, 133

  of neurology, 87, 216, 268–69

  paradigm shifts, 92

  rise of clinical science, 168–69

  role of serendipity, 114, 268, 270–71

  medical school

  additional training needs: disease prevention, 163, 173; end-of-life care, 163; evaluation of heart sounds, 35–36; history of medicine, 163; new technologies, 37–38, 133; public health, 163

  courses on the physician-patient relationship, 164

  economic aspects, 166, 169–70

  efficacy, 170

  mentoring, 170

  overview of coursework, 170

  percent of physicians who would repeat, 226

  Medicare, 163

  medications. See also drug industry; specific brand names

  adherence to the regimen, 41, 153–54, 180–81

  antibiotics. See antibiotics

  antidepressants, 43, 97, 154

  antipsychotics, 105, 150, 268

  antiretrovirals, 40–41, 255, 282–83

  aspirin, 70, 252, 259

  beta-blockers, 69, 70

  calcium channel blockers, 123, 263

  cholesterol-lowering, 29, 31–32, 99, 133, 260, 262–63

  clot-busters, 43, 94

  colchicine, 140, 141

  discovered through serendipity, 114, 268, 270–71

  “lifestyle,” 97

  to minimize possibility of heart attack, 4

  “pharmacological forgiveness,” 180

  prior to 1940, 86–94, 109–10

  for treatment of mental illness, 105–6, 150

  vasodilators, 70

  Melman, Dr. Arnold, 139–42, 143, 145, 146–47

  men

  communication style in relationships, vs. women, 125

  mortality rate for heart disease, 28–29

  prostate cancer, 33, 300

  mental decline

  Alzheimer’s disease, 62, 98–99, 272, 284–85

  with coronary bypass, 9, 44

  mental illness

  belief in recovery, 149–50

  importance of humane treatment, 20, 103, 148, 150

  isolation with, 82, 148, 150

  leading conditions which cause disability, 205–6

  learning to live with, 103

  need for skill as well as compassion, 20

  patient is not the disease, 147–48

  role of medications, 105–6, 268, 269

  symptoms vs. causes of, 87, 269

  mentoring, 170

  Mevacor, 29

  mind-body connection, 114, See also family; friends; social aspects

  conditions that reflect, 156

  paragenetics, 264–65

  placebo effect, 153–57, 264

  reaction to physician’s presence, 161

  miracles, 85

  mitral regurgitation, 70

  Montaigne, Michel de, 151, 152

  mortality. See also death; life expectancy

  AIDS, 41, 43

  associated with control of infectious disease, 109–10

  cancer, 28, 91, 112

  changes in major causes of, 86–94

  coronary bypass, 44

  drug-resistant infections, 26, 255

  effects of inferior medical care, 39–40

  heart disease, 91, 119: heart attack, 25, 28–29, 154; and weight as an infant, 30

  infant, 94, 102–3, 108, 109, 181–82, 286

  open-heart surgery, 44

  mother, author’s

  Alzheimer’s disease, 62, 98–99

  caretaking of, 42

  childhood memories, 52, 76, 77, 197

  long life of, 5

  MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), 33, 95, 231

  Muhlestein, Dr. Joseph B., 256

  multiple sclerosis, 234, 268, 297

  muscular dystrophy, 250, 268

  myocardial infarction. See heart attack

  National Academy of Sciences, 11

  National Health Service Corps, 166

  natural selection, 253–55, 272

  nausea, 5

  neonatal intensive care, 294–95

  Neugeboren, Aaron (son)

  heart condition, 36, 68

  at the hospital after author’s surgery, 299

  at the hospital during author’s surgery, il, 14, 84

  move to author’s home after surgery, 17, 120–21

  in Northampton, 7

  reaction to author’s diagnosis, 79

  Neugeboren, Eli (son)

  in Brooklyn, 7

  childhood, 120

  at the hospital during author’s surgery, 11, 14, 84

  reaction to author’s diagnosis, 79–80, 81

  trip to Israel, 135, 145

  trip to London, 52, 53–54

  visit with author after surgery, 17

  visit with Friedland, 281, 282, 284

  Neugeboren, Jay

  as caregiver, 5, 13, 58

  childhood and adolescence, 11, 12, 45, 72, 185

  family history, 5, 9, 24, 45, 241

  family medical history, 5, 57, 59, 60, 80

  friends. See Friedland, Jerry; Helfant, Rich; Rudy, Arthur; Yarnell, Phil

  Hodgkin’s disease, 5, 76–77, 135

  initial doctor’s visit, 1–6, See also diagnosis: of the author

  medical history of good health, 5, 52

  move to New York City, 22, 121, 122, 298

  nickname, 6

  nodules on penis. See Peyronie’s disease

  open-heart surgery. See coronary bypass: of the author

  relationship with children, 9, 14, 120–21, 130, 300

  as a single parent, 7, 12, 41–42

  trip to Alaska, 178, 179

  trip to Israel, 135, 145

  trip to London, 52, 53–54

  trip to Norway, 177–79

  who will be caregiver f
or, 42, 58, 65

  writings by. See writing career

  Neugeboren, Miriam (daughter)

  at the hospital during author’s surgery, 13, 14, 84

  reaction to author’s diagnosis, 79, 81

  trip to London, 52, 53–54

  visit with author after surgery, 17

  in Washington, D.C., 7

  wedding, 12, 57, 130

  Neugeboren, Robert (brother)

  author as caretaker for, 13, 42

  conversation during author’s recovery, 19

  effects of caring relationships on, 150

  effects of medications, 150–51

  humane care at Bronx State, 19–20

  life in New York City, 285

  move to New York City, 58, 128–29

  notification about the surgery, 13

  neurological conditions

  from coronary bypass, 44

  impact of new treatments, 43

  importance of family, 41

  swelling, 222–23

  traumatic injury, 105, 220–23, 268–69

  neurology, 216, 218, 229–30

  Nigeria, 179–84

  Nightline interview, 17, 51

  nitroglycerine, 64, 65, 70

  Northampton, move from, 22, 121, 122, 128

  Norvasc, 123

  nosocomial infection, 26, 255

  nuclear cardiology, 33, 263

  O’Brien, Dr., 68

  One Renegade Cell: How Cancer Begins (Weinberg), 115–16

  open-heart surgery. See also coronary bypass

  general procedure, 4

  historical background, 277–80

  risks and benefits, 43–44

  organ transplantation, 95

  and antibiotic-resistant bacteria, 288

  economic aspects, 290

  first heart transplant, 281

  immune response, 149

  importance of heart-lung machine, 277

  obsolescence with cure for atherosclerosis, 44

  Osler, William, 36–37

  osteoporosis, 272

  outcome studies, 33

  oxygen

  decreased body temperature and, 4, 246

  supply to the heart, 245–46, 257–58

  PABA (potassium para-aminobenzoate), 138, 140, 143, 145

  pacemakers, 94

  palpitations, 5

  Pam, Dr. Alvin, 19–20

  paradigm shifts, 92

  paragenetics, 264–65

  patient medical history of the author, 5, 57, 59, 60, 80, 247

  correct diagnosis from the, 38, 202–3, 229, 243–44

  as risk factor for cancer, 17

  taking time to get, 38, 169–70, 175

  patients

  with disease that is a unique entity, 33

  experience of illness vs. disease, 156

  ignored by physician, 68, 138–39, 147

  importance of listening to. See listening to the patient

  listening to their own body, 61

  need for persistence, 39, 45

  not a set of symptoms or disease, 20, 95–96, 147–48, 167

  relationship with the physician. See physicians, relationship with the patient

 

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