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Oklahoma Heart Institute In the News: Holiday Heart Syndrome
Read more: Oklahoma Heart Institute In the News: Holiday Heart SyndromeKTUL-TV News Channel 8 Reporter: Kim Jackson The holidays can pull on your heart strings, literally. More people die from heart disease during December, according to numerous studies. So if you think you have heart illness, now is the time to listen to your body. Hospitals and doctors are seeing more patients because of colds…
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Prevent Holiday Heart Attacks
Read more: Prevent Holiday Heart AttacksResearch shows Americans have more fatal heart attacks during the holiday season than any other time of the year. In fact, according to a study published in Circulation, the top three days for heart attacks are December 25, December 26 and January 1, respectively. Regardless of where we live, researchers have found, we are more susceptible to…
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Handling the Holidays with Heart Failure
Read more: Handling the Holidays with Heart FailureHolidays can be hard on the heart. The top days for heart attacks throughout the year are Dec. 25, 26 and Jan. 1. Americans also have a tendency to eat and drink too much this time of year, triggering “Holiday Heart Syndrome.” For heart failure patients, the holidays can be an especially tricky time. Limiting fluid and salt intake…
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Share Your Story – Mike Pelzer
Read more: Share Your Story – Mike PelzerAt 58, Mike Pulzer was starting to slow down, but didn’t know why. “I used to stay up until midnight and wake up at 6am and be fine,” Pulzer says. “Then all of the sudden by 4pm I was done for the day, exhausted.” The normally energetic retirement community executive noticed he was also losing his…
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FREEDOM Trial Results Misleading at AHA
Read more: FREEDOM Trial Results Misleading at AHAThe American Heart Association Sessions are underway in Los Angeles, California this week, presenting a record 28 late-breaking trials, many with potential to impact clinical practice. Director of the Cardiac & Interventional Laboratories at Oklahoma Heart Institute, Dr. Wayne Leimbach is attending sessions and reporting findings as they break. One trial receiving early attention and…
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AHA Sessions: Arrhythmia Trials Present Substantial Findings
Read more: AHA Sessions: Arrhythmia Trials Present Substantial FindingsTwo large arrhythmia trials were presented at the American Heart Association Sessions this week, which could significantly impact clinical practice. Oklahoma Heart Institute participated in both national, multi-center randomized trials, the BLOCK HF trial and MADIT-RIT trial. Oklahoma Heart Institute cardiac electrophysiologist, Dr. David Sandler explains the impact of these findings for patients, “whether through…
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Great American Smokeout
Read more: Great American SmokeoutNovember 15 is the Great American Smokeout, a date the American Cancer Society hopes motivates smokers to make a plan to quit or actually stop smoking on that day. According to recent studies, the number of Americans smoking has remained unchanged from 2010 to 2011, progress stalled as compared to the smoking decline reported from 2005…
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First Two Successful TA-TAVR Procedures in Tulsa Performed at Oklahoma Heart Institute
Read more: First Two Successful TA-TAVR Procedures in Tulsa Performed at Oklahoma Heart InstituteOn Tuesday, November 13, a team of Oklahoma Heart Institute (OHI) physicians successfully performed Tulsa’s first two transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TA-TAVR) procedures. TA-TAVR is a life-saving procedure for patients with severe aortic stenosis who are at too high a risk for traditional open heart surgery. The transapical approach to TAVR was FDA approved…
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Share Your Story – Greg Goin
Read more: Share Your Story – Greg GoinSmoking is the roulette of health gambles. Watching the wheel spin, the marble ball bounce over red, then black until finally stopping on the final number, you never know what you are going to get. You could smoke for a lifetime and escape lung and heart disease. You could be the casual smoker with a…
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Atrial Fibrillation Linked to Sudden Cardiac Death
Read more: Atrial Fibrillation Linked to Sudden Cardiac DeathAtrial Fibrillation (AFib), the most common heart arrhythmia affecting up to 5 million Americans, is now linked to an increased risk for sudden cardiac death, according to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The association was studied in two population cohorts, finding the risk triples for those with incident AFib and…