Former President Ford Gets Angioplasty

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  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49136

    Former President Ford Gets Angioplasty


    Former President Ford Gets Angioplasty

    By CHRIS WILLIAMS
    The Associated Press
    Friday, August 25, 2006; 5:07 PM

    MINNEAPOLIS -- Former President Ford underwent his second heart procedure in a week at the Mayo Clinic when stents were placed into two of his coronary arteries to increase blood flow, his spokeswoman said Friday.

    The angioplasty procedure on the 93-year-old Ford was successful and he was resting comfortably in his room at the hospital in Rochester, spokeswoman Penny Circle said in a statement.

    On Monday, doctors at the clinic had fitted Ford with an implantable cardiac pacemaker to regulate his heartbeat.

    Mayo Clinic spokesman John Murphy confirmed the procedure, but would not comment further. "No further releases or updates are anticipated for several days," he said.

    About 600,000 angioplasties are done each year in the United States alone.

    Through an artery in the leg, doctors snake a tube to blockages that are clogging vessels and preventing them from supplying enough blood to the heart. A balloon opens the vessel and a mesh stent is left behind to prop the artery open.

    The spokeswoman's description of the procedure suggests "that a substantial part of the muscle of the heart is not receiving adequate blood flow," said Dr. Carl J. Pepine, a former president of the American College of Cardiology and chief of the division of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Florida in Gainesville.

    "The stents can be deployed in elderly people very safely, with results that are generally as favorable as they are in younger people," Pepine said.

    Ford was admitted to the clinic Aug. 15 for tests.

    In January, he was hospitalized for 12 days in Rancho Mirage, Calif., for pneumonia. Then in July, Ford spent a few days in Colorado's Vail Valley Medical Center because of shortness of breath.

    Ford became the nation's oldest living former president after the death of Ronald Reagan in 2004.

    Ford was House minority leader when President Nixon chose him to replace Spiro Agnew, who resigned, as vice president in 1973. Ford became president on Aug. 9, 1974, when Nixon resigned amid the Watergate scandal.

    Ford and his wife, Betty, live in Rancho Mirage.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Joshua Freed contributed to this report.
  • FORD
    ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

    • Jan 2004
    • 58759

    #2
    Relatively speaking, this is probably a good sign. If his body was otherwise falling apart and death was imminent, they probably wouldn't be bothering with all the hardware.

    So he's probably otherwise in fairly good shape for a 93 year old. Any more surgery would NOT be a good thing though. It takes the body a little longer to heal at that age.
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    Comment

    • Hardrock69
      DIAMOND STATUS
      • Feb 2005
      • 21838

      #3
      He is not long for this earth.

      Comment

      • Nickdfresh
        SUPER MODERATOR

        • Oct 2004
        • 49136

        #4
        He's a pretty tough old man though. But at 93, he certainly is not long for this earth.

        Comment

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