The final case was the most complex. Julian Vane suffered from end-stage Heart Failure. His heart was enlarged and "dyssynchronous"—the left and right sides were beating out of step, like two rowers in a boat pulling at different times. He couldn't walk ten feet without gasping for air.
Elias had implanted an .
The second folder was heavier. Marcus Reed was forty-five, a marathon runner with a hidden enemy: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. His heart walls were too thick, a genetic quirk that turned his greatest passion into a lethal gamble. Marcus didn't need a constant rhythm; he needed a "fail-safe." A Case-Based Approach to Pacemakers, ICDs, and ...
Elias opened the first file. Mrs. Gable was eighty-two, a retired piano teacher whose heart had begun to "stutter," as she put it. Her EKG showed a classic Third-Degree Heart Block—the electrical signals from her atria were simply not reaching her ventricles. Her heart was a house where the upstairs and downstairs had stopped speaking. The final case was the most complex