The above photo was taken today.
CNN reports that Cheney's pacemaker needs a new battery. OK there has got to be a joke in that story someplace. I guess we will have to watch the late night shows and see what jokes they come up with.
I have not made an appointment with a heart doctor yet.
I did find see a story at the CNN web site: 5 Operations You Don't Want to Get
What are the five? Hysterectomy, Episiotomy, Angioplasty, Heartburn surgery and Lower-back surgery.
Well the first two I don't have to worry about. Smile
From the CNN story:
Angioplasty Every year in the United States, surgeons perform 1.2 million angioplasties, during which a cardiologist uses tiny balloons and implanted wire cages known as stents to unclog arteries. This Roto-Rooter-type approach is less invasive and has a shorter recovery period than bypass, which is open-heart surgery. The problem: A groundbreaking study of more than 2,000 heart patients indicated that a completely nonsurgical method -- heart medication -- was just as beneficial as angioplasty and stents in keeping arteries open in many patients. The bottom line: Angioplasty did not appear to prevent heart attacks or save lives among nonemergency heart subjects in the study. What to do instead Take the right meds. If the study is right, medications may be as strong as steel. "If you have chest pain and are stable, you can take medicines that do the job of angioplasty," says William Boden, M.D., of the University of Buffalo School of Medicine, Buffalo, New York, and an author of the study. Medicines used in the study included aspirin, and blood pressure and cholesterol drugs -- and they were taken along with exercise and diet changes. Health.com: Keep your heart healthy "If those don't work, then you can have angioplasty," Boden says. "Now we can unequivocally say that." Of course, what's right for you depends on the severity of your atherosclerosis risks (blood pressure, cholesterol, triglycerides) along with any heart-related pain. The onus is also on the patient to treat a doc's lifestyle recommendations -- diet and exercise guidelines -- just as seriously as if they were prescription medicines.
