|
LARRY KING, CNN HOST: Tonight,
surviving heart disease, one of
America's deadliest killers
striking young and old, men and
women. With us Patty Duke, the
legendary actress had bypass
surgery just over a year ago;
Kate Jackson, the "Charlie's
Angels" star underwent open
heart surgery to fix a life
threatening defect that she
never knew she had; Jennie Garth
of "Beverly Hills 90210" fame,
riding an emotional roller
coaster with her dad who's had
five open heart surgeries;
renowned cardiologist Dr. P. K.
Shah and Dr. Arthur Agatston,
the cardiologist and author of
the best-selling "South Beach
Diet." What they know could save
your life.
It's next on LARRY KING LIVE.
I'm wearing a red tie tonight
for a good reason. This is
National Wear Red Day or Go Red
as it's called. Laura Bush has
been spearheading this to
encourage people to take an
interest in women and heart
disease. As it happens, we have
three women associated with it
tonight as our guests, Patty
Duke, Jenny Garth and Kate
Jackson.
Let's start with our doctors
though. We've got lots of
interesting stuff coming this
evening as we look at heart
disease. Is it true, Dr. Shah
that we've generally looked at
heart disease in the past as
male?
DR. P. K. SHAH, INTERNATIONALLY
RENOWNED CARDIOLOGIST: That's
absolutely correct, Larry. Until
very recently people didn't
recognize the fact that heart
disease is an equal opportunity
killer of men and women.
And it's only in the last few
years that as the awareness has
increased that women have begun
to recognize the fact that what
kills most women is heart
disease and yet they used to
fear breast cancer the most but
cancer is not the leading killer
of men or women. It's heart
disease.
KING: Why was it not emphasized,
Dr. Agatston?
DR. ARTHUR AGATSTON,
CARDIOLOGIST, AUTHOR "THE SOUTH
BEACH DIET": Well, women
developed heart disease later
than men and that was -- that
was one of the feelings that
more young men were dying of
heart attacks than women but
soon after menopause women begin
to catch up.
They also often don't present
like men do. They're more likely
to not have typical chest pain.
They have more shortness of
breath, sweating and some
dizziness and for that reason
sometimes their heart disease
was missed. KING: Did doctors
tend, Dr. Shah, frankly to
dismiss them?
SHAH: Well, I say that women had
three strikes against them.
First they were never aware that
they were at risk and so they
didn't believe their own
symptoms. Their spouses would
often dismiss them as well and
would not believe that they
could be having heart problems.
And their physicians dismissed
their symptoms as well.
So, because of this, I think
often the diagnosis of heart
disease was made later in women
than in men and sometimes not
even made until they had a
catastrophic complication like a
massive heart attack or stroke.
KING: By the way, Dr. Agatston
it's interesting to learn, we
learned before the show, studied
under Dr. Shah is that right?
AGATSTON: Yes, he was -- his
great lectures actually
influenced me to go into
cardiology.
KING: So you're partially
responsible for the success of
this book P. K.
SHAH: Well, I hope he shares
that with me, just kidding
Arthur.
KING: Patty Duke what's...
AGATSTON: We'll negotiate after
the show.
SHAH: OK, OK.
KING: Patty Duke, what's your
story? What happened?
PATTY DUKE, ACTRESS: My story is
that for a couple of years I was
having some blockages in my
arteries and they were taken
care of very well by stents.
KING: Angioplasty?
DUKE: Yes and then there came
the moment where we'd done
enough stents and it was time to
do open heart surgery in order
to fix the right coronary
artery. And, it's funny, you
know, you don't -- you don't
know how you're going to react
until a doctor tells you that.
And, I of course always want to
be real cool. I was real cool
with a quivering lip and
terrified, utterly terrified. Do
you know right after the
surgery, I mean it hurt, there
were things that hurt but I felt
better up here.
KING: Me too.
DUKE: I really did. You know
that feeling?
KING: Oh, I was scared, nothing
scarier than facing...
DUKE: Yes.
KING: Are you aware of that Dr.
Shah?
SHAH: Oh, absolutely.
KING: That the patient is scared
to death?
SHAH: Absolutely, absolutely. In
fact, people have recorded
conversations with patients
prior to surgery and then after
surgery and compared and there's
a big difference in how patients
perceived going in as well as
coming out, what a big
difference, very scary even
though they may be very stoic
and deny it but when you really,
really question them it is a
scary moment to go under the
gun, under the knife.
KING: Jennie, yours has been in
the family, right? You don't
have heart disease?
JENNIE GARTH, ACTRESS: No, I
don't have heart disease.
DUKE: Knock on wood.
GARTH: Yes, please. My father
suffered his first heart attack
when I was nine and has been
battling heart disease for the
last 26 years.
KING: Other heart attacks after
that?
GARTH: Yes, he actually had I
think four or five open heart
surgeries and is now in the
throws of congestive heart
failure as a result of a damaged
heart muscle.
KING: How old?
GARTH: He is 73 but he will not
give up. He just keeps rattling.
Every time I think that he's
going downhill he comes back
stronger than ever because he
has such a great will to live.
DUKE: He's the inspiration for
the rest of us.
GARTH: Yes.
DUKE: I mean...
KING: Are you concerned about
yourself since you probably have
the gene?
GARTH: Definitely. I mean I was
grilling Dr. Shah in the Green
Room. He said if you recommended
him, by the way, he would be my
cardiologist should I need one.
KING: I'll recommend.
GARTH: OK, good.
DUKE: Not bad.
GARTH: Yes, it's something I
definitely think about and
especially with my work with the
American Heart Association and
the Go Red for Women campaign.
I've really become sort of ultra
sensitive and thinking about
going and getting some tests
done.
KING: We'll get to it. It's a
good idea. We'll get to all
that. Now, Kate, you had what a
hole in your heart?
KATE JACKSON, ACTRESS: I had an
ASD, an Atrial Septal Defect,
which is a hole in my heart
and...
KING: How did you pick that up?
I mean how did they pick it up?
JACKSON: Jerry Pohost, Dr.
Gerald Pohost, who is the head
of cardiology at S.C. now was in
Alabama at UAB when my mom lived
down there and I was coming home
from doing a television movie
and I just didn't feel very good
and we'd been doing night
shootings so I'd been up all
night and trying to sleep in the
day.
And, I got home to visit and I
couldn't sleep in the night,
couldn't sleep in the day and I
really felt terrible. And I
called him and said, "Jerry, I
just don't feel good. I think I
belong in the hospital."
And he arranged for me to have a
bed and they all fussed over me
and he was leaving, walking
toward the door, I can see it in
my mind, and he said, "Well, I
am a cardiologist" and he turned
around and said, "I might as
well listen to your heart" and
he heard it with a stethoscope.
And, I hadn't been a stranger to
doctors and it had been missed
on EKGs and on all sorts of
things. So, the next day they
sent in the, what's the machine?
DUKE: Ultrasound.
JACKSON: Ultrasound machine and
I had an MRI and they did the
EKG and they confirmed his
diagnosis that I had an ASD.
KING: How did they miss it, P.
K.?
SHAH: Well, this is a hole in
the heart that you're born with
between the two upper chambers
of the heart and it produces
very subtle findings that an
experienced cardiologist can
listen to and suspect it. But a
casual observer or a casual
physician may completely miss
it.
Luckily, it's very easy to
confirm the diagnosis with a
simple non-invasive
echocardiogram, ultrasound of
the heart. And, unlike what Kate
had, she had a surgical closure
of the hole. Nowadays, we don't
do surgery for these holes.
KING: What do you do?
SHAH: We fix them non-surgically
using a special catheter that
you thread through the groin
under local anesthesia and at
the end of the catheter you
deploy an umbrella-like device
that you push across the hole
and pull back and it deploys and
closes the hole non- surgically.
It takes an hour or two and we
do it day in and day out, so
you're home the next day. You
take aspirin and Plavix for a
few months and you're done.
KING: Dr. Agatston, how rapid
are these advances?
AGATSTON: Well, they've been --
they're really accelerating as
we speak and I think one of the
important messages is that
cardiologists and internists
around the country who are
practicing aggressive prevention
are really not seeing heart
attacks in their practices
anymore.
There are naturally always
exceptions but a lot of the
future is now we know how to
prevent heart attacks;
unfortunately, too many of our
resources are oriented toward
the end of the process, after
somebody has had a heart attack
with bypass surgery and stents
rather than prevention before.
In New York City recently, there
was a "New York Times" story
about diabetes prevention
clinics and the prevention
clinics were doing so well at
preventing the complications of
diabetes that there were not
enough amputations and heart
surgeries to pay for the clinics
because they don't pay for the
prevention and clinics had to
close.
KING: Oh.
AGATSTON: So, we have to
concentrate more on prevention.
KING: We'll take a break and
come right back with more. Our
entire program tonight devoted
to Go Red, the women campaign of
National Wear Red Day to focus
alert on women and heart
disease. Don't go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
JACLYN SMITH, ACTRESS: Please
join me and the American Heart
Association as we carry a strong
message to women across America.
Cardiovascular disease is our
disease too. Let's do something
about it.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Just one personal note,
back in 1987 I suffered a heart
attack and subsequently had
quintuple bypass surgery. That
was in New York City, now living
in Los Angeles. Dr. P. K. Shah
by the way is my cardiologist
and we started a Larry King
Cardiac Foundation. That
foundation helps people who
can't afford it to get various
heart procedures. We have -- if
you want more information on the
foundation it's lkcf.org.
But I wanted to read a letter.
You may notice we're all wearing
these little red bands. Everyone
has one. I got a letter from a
young man in Maryland. He's
eleven years old.
It said, "Dear Mr. King: My name
is Matthew and I'm writing to
you on account of a loss. My
father had just died recently so
I haven't been feeling so great.
But when I heard about your
organization I felt better
because then I knew that I could
save somebody else's father and
make myself feel better knowing
that I could save a life and
spare a family from the pain
this whole experience has caused
me.
I really wanted to help, so I
made things like "live strong"
bands but instead of saying live
strong it was red and said "be
smart, save a heart." I have had
help with my friend Mason Carmel
(ph) and some other people to
help me sell them in school.
Thank you for taking time to
read my letter."
And these are those things.
That's the kind of thing that
expands...
DUKE: Bravo.
JACKSON: That's great.
KING: When you have it hit home
to your own, to your own. Do you
take special care of your dad
Jennie?
GARTH: Oh, yes.
KING: Check on him every day?
GARTH: I call pretty much every
day. My mom's with him every day
and he -- he's just such an
amazing man. I love spending
time with him. I love my two
daughters to be able to spend
every day with him. It's just so
valued and cherished.
KING: Patty, do you do good post
operative? Are you taking care
of yourself?
DUKE: Yes, I did my rehab,
though I tried to find every way
out of it but I did go and do my
rehab and now I do walking and I
eat in a far more healthy
fashion.
KING: Do you have to watch
yourself Kate?
JACKSON: Oh, sure. Well, I was
lucky. I've always sort of lived
a heart healthy lifestyle, which
is sort of what we were talking
about a minute ago. We're
concentrating on what happens
after heart disease has been
diagnosed and what do you do to
keep it from happening because
it is a lifestyle choice pretty
much?
You choose what you eat. You
choose whether or not you
exercise and you choose whether
or not you smoke, which is
probably the one single most
devastating thing you can do to
your health anyway.
But, if you choose to eat a
heart healthy diet and it's easy
to find out what that is, you
can go to the American Heart
Association's Web site and many
other places, if you choose to
exercise, half an hour a day and
if you choose not to smoke you
will not choose to have heart
disease. If you don't, if you
make the other choices and you
eat lots of fat and you get your
cholesterol all up and you live
a sedentary lifestyle and you
smoke, then you choose heart
disease. So, if we can, like on
this show, if we can -- if we
can maybe help a few people who
are watching not choose heart
disease we will have done an
awful lot.
KING: And you can choose it.
What, Dr. Shah and the same one
for Dr. Agatston, what about
this whole disease process, you
work with it every day, puzzles
you the most?
SHAH: Well...
KING: What about heart disease
knocks your mind out?
SHAH: I completely agree with
Kate. It's largely a lifestyle
issue but not entirely. There
are genetic predispositions for
some individuals that they look
at a cigarette, let alone smoke,
and they drop dead of a heart
attack. And there are others,
like Winston Churchill, who
smoke, who are fat, who have
high cholesterol, they live to
be 90. What's different...
KING: What is it?
SHAH: ...is the genetic make up.
But genes basically load the
gun. Lifestyle pulls the
trigger.
KING: Can you ever change the
gene?
SHAH: You can abort the
consequences of a genetic
predisposition by adopting a
healthy lifestyle. You can
suppress it.
KING: But what, Dr. Agatston,
bugs you about the disease
itself? What is it about the
disease that confounds you?
AGATSTON: Well, when I hear --
well, really the way it's often
forgotten and we don't
appreciate how treatable it is.
And when you read a story like
that 11-year-old who lost his
dad and I feel that that's
completely preventable.
And we have to realize that for
somebody who's heading for a
heart attack in their 50s, 60s,
70s, there's arteriosclerosis
building up in your teenage,
young adult years. Twenty-five
percent of Vietnam casualties
already had arteriosclerosis in
their artery walls, so it's a
long process and it gives us a
long time to intervene.
And we can, we have to know our
risk factors and if we -- if we
have risk factors then we have
to really be careful about diet
and lifestyle and about early
diagnosis, do regular blood
tests. There are imaging studies
today where you can see the
buildup of plaque in the
arteries years before it causes
a heart attack or stroke, so
early detection and early
treatment is key.
KING: I take eleven different
drugs a day. How many do you
take?
DUKE: I don't take any heart
medicine.
KING: No?
DUKE: None.
KING: Your father how many does
he take?
GARTH: I couldn't count the
amount of medicine that he takes
on a daily basis.
KING: A lot? How much do you
take Kate?
JACKSON: Two baby aspirin.
KING: That's all?
JACKSON: Yes. I mean I take my
vitamins and I get a lot of
medicine through my (INAUDIBLE).
KING: Are there wonder drugs in
this field?
SHAH: Well, there are wonder
drugs that we have currently
available.
KING: Yes.
SHAH: And for reducing the risk
of a heart attack or a stroke
among the medications aspirin is
effective. Cholesterol-lowering
medications like the statins are
effective in the vast majority
of cases.
But coming down the pike are new
classes of medications that will
allow us to actually reverse
plaque that's already there and
these medications are based on
boosting the function or the
levels of the good cholesterol
in the body, which is the HDL
cholesterol.
One of these drugs we developed
in our laboratory at
Cedars-Sinai is an injectable
HDL that once the clinical
trials are completed and if they
confirm what we saw in our
animal tests in shrinking
plaque, we will have in the next
three to four years drugs like
that and many others that work
similarly to reverse plaque
buildup. So, I think the future
actually looks very good
(INAUDIBLE).
(CROSSTALK)
KING: We'll take -- let me get a
break, Kate. We'll pick up on
that. That's extraordinary.
Don't go away. We'll be right
back.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
BILL CLINTON, FORMER PRESIDENT
OF THE UNITED STATES (by
telephone): You know some of
this is genetic and I may have
done some damage in those years
when I was too careless about
what I ate. So, for whatever
reason, I've got a problem and
I've got a chance to deal with
it and I feel that I've really
got -- let me just say this.
Republicans aren't the only
people who want four more years
here. (END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: Dr. Agatston, what do you
make of what Dr. Shah just said
about the possibility of
reversing plaque?
AGATSTON: Absolutely and I know
Dr. Shah's work and in one of
the proteins he worked with,
called the Milano protein that
they injected in humans and
could see on ultrasound that it
actually shrunk plaque in a
matter of weeks and one of the
exciting things is they had to
document this at catherization
with an invasive test, the
intravascular ultrasound.
But we're getting to a point
with non-invasive imaging with
the new 64-slice scanner, CT
scanner and there are some new
generations coming down the pike
where we'll be able to really do
a non-invasive intravascular
ultrasound.
We'll be able to see the plaque
building up and then when we use
these revolutionary medications
that Dr. Shah is talking about,
we'll actually be able to
document in the individual that
they're working.
Everybody has their own level of
cholesterol where they're laying
down plaque and we'll be able to
see who's laying down plaque and
how the medications are working.
KING: Dr. Shah, the number one
selling drug in the world is
Lipitor, got to be a reason for
that.
SHAH: Yes, it's a very effective
way to lower the bad cholesterol
levels and studies have shown
that that reduces risk of a
heart attack, a stroke and
death.
KING: Now they're (INAUDIBLE)
where they prevent stroke.
SHAH: That is correct because
basically 90 percent of strokes
are due to blood clots and
plaques in the arteries of the
brain. Ten percent are due to
hemorrhage or bleeding.
And those strokes that are due
to blood clots and plaque can be
dramatically reduced by
controlling cholesterol levels
and using aspirin and other
blood thinning medications. So,
stroke like heart attack, many
cases are actually preventable.
KING: Do you go in for checkups
Patty?
DUKE: You bet. You bet. They are
so important. And, I would like
to see Dr. Burnette (ph) again.
He's very special to me.
KING: Your dad stay on top of
things?
GARTH: Yes. He's on a very
strict schedule and I think
through all of that I'm really
learning so much, like about
women and appreciating their
heart, you know, because I think
about it as a woman. I spend a
lot of time worrying about
things that I can see, my hair,
my body, my breasts even and all
kinds of things like that but I
don't really ever stop to
appreciate my heart or to think
about all the work that it's
doing.
KING: You worry more about
breast cancer than heart?
DUKE: Exactly.
GARTH: I think yes before my
experience with this I did. I
had never known and most women
don't know that it's the number
one killer of American women and
that was just devastating news
to me.
DUKE: And that it's fixable.
GARTH: Yes, exactly. If you make
the right choices, as you were
saying, and go and see your
doctor.
KING: Are you aware, Kate, that
while breast cancer is more --
people have more of an image of
the threat, heart is a bigger
threat?
JACKSON: Yes, I was aware. I
knew because my mother's father
had had -- had dropped dead when
he was 41 years old and so that
had affected my mom's life a lot
and so she was -- she was
conscious of her heart.
KING: But of your own fear did
you fear breast cancer more than
heart disease (INAUDIBLE)?
JACKSON: You know to tell you
the truth, Larry, I didn't fear
anything then. I was young. I
didn't know...
DUKE: Invincible.
JACKSON: ...that life happens,
you know. I thought it happens
to somebody else.
GARTH: Yes.
JACKSON: And, you know I didn't
-- I didn't think about fearing.
KING: It's that old EKG still
important which only it measures
the heart at that minute right?
SHAH: Yes, EKG...
KING: You can take an EKG and
drop dead walking out of the
office.
SHAH: The EKG is important but
it is often not sufficient by
itself. Nowadays, as Dr.
Agatston mentioned, we have the
ability to identify the buildup
of plaque in the arteries to the
brain and the arteries to the
heart using non-invasive imaging
tests like a CT of the heart or
an ultrasound long before it
produces any narrowing, long
before it produces any symptom,
long before the EKG becomes
abnormal, long before even the
stress test becomes abnormal we
can detect the disease. So,
really people need to understand
what their risks are and should
be asking their physicians do I
have this disease? Should I be
making some changes in my
lifestyle? I think proactively,
people are proactive the vast
majority of these premature
events can be prevented.
JACKSON: And women especially
should insist that they be
treated as you would treat a man
that you would think is becoming
of the age and all that, that
he's at risk for heart disease,
the executive who's in his 50s
and he's overweight and he
doesn't exercise enough and the
doctor begins to worry about his
heart. A woman should say treat
me as if I were a man. Now, I'm
however old I am, what are my
risk factors?
KING: We'll talk about
cholesterol and the baby
boomers. As we go to break, I'll
reintroduce the panel, don't go
away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
KING: You jump though at pain
right? We all do.
DICK CHENEY, VICE PRESIDENT OF
THE UNITED STATES: Yes, and I've
never, I'm sure the same is true
for you, Larry, you become very
sensitive to what's going on.
KING: Oh, do you and you think
sometimes you get false
feelings.
CHENEY: Occasionally you get
false feelings but it's never
been intense pain but it doesn't
take much to trigger it and say
well I better go have it checked
(INAUDIBLE).
KING: And that's the smart
thing.
CHENEY: Absolutely.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: This is national "Go Red
Day" and Barbara -- Laura Bush
and others are supporting this
nationally, as we focus
attention on women and heart
disease in this appropriate
month of February. And as I said
earlier, the Larry King Cardiac
Foundation is also very, very
involved in helping people help
themselves. And for more
information on that it's
LKCF.org.
And let's meet our panel. Patty
Duke is the Oscar and Emmy-
winning actress who underwent
heart bypass surgery in 2004.
Jennie Garth is the actress with
credits that include staring
roles in TV series "What I Like
about You" and "Beverly Hills
90210." Her father had a heart
attack when she was nine, and
he's had several open heart
surgeries. She volunteers for
the "Go Red for Women" campaign.
Kate Jackson, actress who
underwent cardiac surgery as an
adult to correct a hole in her
heart. Past recipient of the
American Heart Association's
"Power of Love" award for her
ongoing effort to increase
public awareness of heart
disease.
Dr. P.K. Shah is the
internationally renowned
cardiologist, director of the
Division of Cardiology and
Arthrosclerosis at the Research
Center at Cedars-Sinai,
professor of medicine USL School
of Medicine, a member of the
Medical Advisory Board of the
King Cardiac Foundation.
And Dr. Arthur Agatston,
cardiologist, associate
professor of medicine at the
University of Miami, Miller
School of Medicine, and author
of best-selling books, you know
them as the South Beach Diet
books.
Dr. Shah was saying something
during the break that I never
quite heard. You could have a
mate break up with you, you
could get bad news and get a
heart attack.
SHAH: That's correct. This is
particularly true for women,
death of a spouse. Sometimes
even extreme good news can
trigger can trigger...
KING: Also the death of a
spouse.
SHAH: That's right.
(LAUGHTER)
(CROSSTALK)
SHAH: Which may be good news for
some -- can trigger a massive
surge of adrenaline in the body
which rapidly paralyzes the
heart, creates a situation,
looks like a heart attack, and
you can really either die from
it, if you're lucky you get into
the hospital. The angiogram
shows the arteries are normal,
but the heart is paralyzed.
Luckily for most such patients,
the recovery tends to be nearly
complete, in most cases.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Wow.
KING: Now, what changes the
paralysis?
SHAH: What basically changes is
the catecholamine or the
adrenaline surge dies down, and
the heart that was stunned is
now recovering on its own. And
for all practical purposes,
unless you do an angiogram, you
can't tell it from a massive
heart attack, so it's really
adrenaline induced, stress
induced cardiac dysfunction,
looking like a heart attack,
it's particular to women,
largely occurs in women, very
rare in men.
KING: Does that surprise you Dr.
Agatston?
AGATSTON: No. And I saw a case
like that in my own practice
about a year ago and I was
shocked to hear this woman was
in the emergency room. Her
lipids were good, her heart
stands were good, and came in,
and looked at her EKG and said,
you know, my feeling was, my
god, you can't be having a heart
attack, we've been treating so
well. And we sent her to the
cath lab, she had normal
coronary arteries and her heart
function came back to normal in
several days. Her husband was
giving a eulogy at a funeral
when she developed her symptoms.
So, again, a big surge of
adrenaline.
KING: So you could win the Super
Bowl and get a surge, right?
SHAH: Right. Anything that
creates either intense positive
or negative emotion can trigger
an adrenaline surge. Most often
it's a negative, like the death
of a spouse, or divorce or
something like that. Less often
it is a happy occasion.
KING: What problem are the baby
boomers going to bring to heart
disease?
SHAH: I'm sorry?
KING: The baby boomers.
SHAH: Well, the baby boomers
aren't very concerned about
what's happening. Physical
inactivity, obesity, diabetes
are going to create a future
epidemic of heart disease,
completely new epidemic, because
our children are spending more
time in front of the television
or the terminal, and not out in
the soccer field. They're eating
junk food at schools, and
there's very little emphasis in
physical activity in schools or
nutrition in schools. Obesity
incidence in teenagers has
doubled in the last 15 to 20
years, 16 to 20 percent of all
teenagers are obese. And obesity
creates diabetes, diabetes kills
through cardiac disease. So
we're really poised to face an
epidemic of cardiovascular
disease in the coming years
because childhood obesity and
obese kids have an 80 percent
chance of growing up as obese
adults.
KING: Can you reverse that, Dr.
Agatston?
AGATSTON: Yes, in fact, we have
a program in schools now run by
our research institute where
we're trying to make it change.
It's not easy. And one thing we
don't appreciate, right now,
that the No. 1 vegetable eaten
by kids is French fries and many
have not really seen a healthy
vegetable, or don't know what it
is. One fourth-grader, when she
first ate grapes at school as
part of our program said, "Boy,
can you get these at home?" She
didn't realize they existed. And
the kids are eating totally
empty calories. No fruits and
vegetables, none of the good
fats, and not only are they
overfed, and obese, but they are
literally undernourished or
malnourished. A lot of what we
call attention deficit, behavior
academic problems are due to
this and that's why it's been
predicted that we may be the
first generation where the kids
don't live as long as their
parents.
And as far as the baby boomers,
the -- you know, it's a
demographic problem that's going
to really overwhelm the medical
care system. We just don't have
enough primary care doctors,
more are leaving or retiring
than are medical students going
into primary care. And there's a
real danger we won't have enough
doctors to take care of this
coming epidemic of the baby
boomers reaching the coronary
artery age.
KING: Patty, do you drink
alcohol? DUKE: Not a jot.
KING: Do you? Would it be all
right to have a drink once in
awhile? It's OK?
SHAH: For alcohol, there is a
safe limit, and that's half of
one drink for women per day, and
one drink to maybe one and a
half or two drinks for men a
day. And again, for the vast
majority of the people, that's
an acceptable healthy limit, and
may even be partially
protective. But you have to also
look at the converse of that. If
you have a tendency to
addiction, that can be a deadly
habit. If you have a tendency
for liver disease, that can be a
problem. And alcohol also
contributes calories and so
weight gain, if you have a
weight gain problem, that can be
an issue as well.
KING: How about red wine?
SHAH: I think any form of
alcohol, a shot of moonshine,
is, in moderation, may be
acceptable.
KING: We'll be right back. Don't
go away.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
ELTON JOHN, MUSICIAN: I was on
the tennis court when David, my
partner, came down and said,
"Elton, they'd rather you not
play tennis," and I said, "Why
is that?" And they said, "Well,
you've got to go back. They
found something wrong and they
want to do deal with your
heart." And I just went nuts. I
though, oh, great. And I talked
to my doctor, and I must admit
-- you know, I'm sometimes quite
renowned for my outbursts and I
was just very frustrated. Maybe
a little frightened. But I --
the upshot was, I went back, and
he said, "Listen, all you've got
to do is have this pacemaker put
in." It took an hour and a half.
I was back in France within 36
hours, recovering. And it's been
fine
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: If we keep on improving,
and make these drastic
improvements, we're going to
live longer, right? You're going
to have a much more aging
population, aren't you?
SHAH: Correct.
KING: That gives you another
problem.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'll take
it.
SHAH: It's expensive. Because if
you have more older people
living longer, it is conceivable
that our social structure cannot
handle it so many nonagenarians
or centenarians. So I think
there are potential downsides to
living too long.
KING: For you maybe. SHAH: From
a societal reasons.
DUKE: You can modify it except
for me.
KING: Exercise. How important?
JACKSON: Very important. Very
important.
SHAH: Absolutely. Extremely
important not to be a couch
potato, even 20 to 30 minutes of
brisk walking can have very
healthful effects overall.
KING: Walking's very good, isn't
it?
SHAH: Absolutely. One of the
safest exercises, and it doesn't
cost you anything at all. You
don't need a gym, you don't need
a personal trainer. Just move,
30 minutes a day.
UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: If you --
you don't have to like it, you
just have to do it.
KING: What does stem cell
research mean?
SHAH: Stem cell is -- research
is really a potential that has
not yet been realized. But I'm
confident that in the next
several years, as we understand,
the signals that coax a stem
cell to become a heart or a
kidney or a pancreas or a brain,
as we understand those signals,
I think there'll be a huge, huge
implication for chronic diseases
like Parkinson's, like diabetes,
like advanced heart failure,
where if you could regrow heart
muscle, help somebody with a
weak heart, or regrow a normal
pancreas with someone with
insulin requiring it for
diabetes, or replace the tissue
that's abnormal in Parkinson's
with healthy tissue, I think you
could really make a huge impact.
But we're at the primary stage,
we're not there yet. I think
it's going to take...
JACKSON: My father had
Parkinson's disease...
SHAH: Yes.
JACKSON: And I hope you...
SHAH: It's going to take time,
because the signs are moving at
a rapid pace, but we're not
quite there yet. I'm very
optimistic in the future
about...
KING: About transplants. By the
way, are there some things that
women -- someone told me today
that there are certain
procedures that women don't
handle as well as men regarding
the heart. Is there such a thing
like angiograms? Do the women
handle them the same way men do?
SHAH: Yeah, generally, I don't
think there's a problem with
that. Women tend to have smaller
arteries compared to men, in
general. And also, when women
get plaque buildup, sometimes
the plaque buildup is more
diffused than localized certain
segments of the arteries, so
there are differences between
the way women and men react to
heart disease.
KING: Were you going to say
something, Dr. Agatston?
AGATSTON: Yeah, and particularly
with bypass surgery, they don't
do as well as men. It's thought
to be probably because they have
smaller arteries to work with.
But it's another reason why
early diagnosis in women is so
important, because they may not
do as well with some of the
invasive procedures.
KING: Transplants, how far have
they come?
SHAH: Cardiac transplant? At the
present time, for end stage
heart disease, it's the only
game in town. I mean, if
somebody...
KING: How many people have them?
SHAH: Well, about 2,000
transplants are done a year, in
the United States, roughly. But
there are four times as many
people as needs them but cannot
get them because there's not
enough donors. So there's a
donor shortage, so a lot of
people actually die while
waiting for a transplant,
because there's not enough
donors.
KING: And when you get it, how
well does it work?
SHAH: Well, let's put it this
way. Once you put a new heart
into somebody, you have a
one-year likelihood of dying of
about five percent to 10
percent. Means 90 to 95 percent
chance that you'll survive. And
then over the next five years,
you lose about 20 percent to 30
percent of the people. So, 70
percent survival by five years
after a transplant. That's, in a
group of people who, without a
transplant would have...
KING: All died.
SHAH: Practically all be dead by
then, so it is a big advance,
but it is a major commitment on
the part of society, the
doctors, the physicians, the
patient, because these patients
have to take 20, 30 different
medications to prevent
rejection, to prevent infection,
and to prevent the complication
of the anti-rejection
medications. So, it's a...
KING: You mean you take medicine
because of the medicine that you
take.
SHAH: Exactly.
KING: We'll take a break now and
analyze that. We'll be back with
more, don't go away.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
KING: We're back. By the way,
for the record, we mentioned a
few medications in the course of
our discussion tonight, but
LARRY KING LIVE is not promoting
the use of any specific drugs.
In fact, no drugs should be used
without first getting your
doctor's approval, which, of
course, with prescription drugs,
you would think is the only way
to get it. However, one day I'll
figure it out. Stress and -- do
you think stress played a part
in your...
DUKE: I do. I do. The symptoms
started with shortness of breath
and, you know, I have been known
to be emotional. So, I wouldn't
be surprised if I heard good or
bad news and have heart attack.
That would be, you know, logical
for me.
GARTH: Now that you know about
it.
DUKE: Now that I know about it,
I'm going to work it out.
KING: Are you good with stress?
DUKE: It's funny, I am. What I'm
not good with is the stress I
provoke. You know, the things I
worry about that have nothing to
do with reality, really. That is
far more stressful than the
stresses of the day.
KING: When we return to our
psychiatric panel, we'll have
you back.
(LAUGHTER)
KING: Stress get to you, Jennie?
GARTH: Yes, it does.
KING: You look like the kind
that would.
GARTH: I look stressed out?
KING: No (UNINTELLIGIBLE).
GARTH: I try to -- I handle
situations well, under the gun,
when there's something bad
happening. I mean, so many times
when my dad was in the hospital,
and it was just so traumatic on
me as a young girl, and a
teenager and a young woman it --
I'm surprised and shocked that I
or my mom or sisters have not
dropped dead from a heart attack
during all of that, ourselves.
It's...
KING: Kate?
JACKSON: How well do I handle
stress? Oh, well, I guess I
handle it -- I'm aware of it and
I'm aware that I need to handle
it well. I need not to, you
know, let it overwhelm me, so...
KING: Do you handle it well, P.K.?
SHAH: Well, in general, yes.
But, when I lose a patient, I'm
devastated. And that kind of
stress is very difficult.
KING: Do you blame yourself?
SHAH: Not necessarily blame,
it's just some sadness
associated with a loss of life
because in my view all our
lives, we work to preserve life
and then when somebody just
doesn't make it, it is
devastating... KING: I had a
doctor tell me once that when a
patient dies, a little bit of
him dies.
SHAH: Absolutely. Absolutely.
KING: Dr. Agatston, how well do
you handle the stress of your
profession?
AGATSTON: Well, I enjoy just
about everything I do, but
sometimes doing too much in a
day is where the stress comes
in. And I -- one point is
regular exercise, which I do,
really do to help stress. The
adrenaline that Dr. Shah talked
about before can sometimes cause
a heart attack if in a sense the
gun is loaded, the
arteriosclerosis is there. You
-- while you increase the
adrenaline while you're
exercising, your average level
decreases and it doesn't peak as
much when there is a stress, so
regular exercise is a great way
to combat stress.
KING: Do we know, Dr. Shah, that
stress adds to heart problems?
Do we know that?
SHAH: No question about it. In
fact, studies in animals, like
in dogs, when you make dogs very
angry, their electrocardiogram
can show changes that looking
like a heart attack and that was
done in Boston, actually, by
Bernard (UNINTELLIGIBLE). So we
know stress can actually induce
narrowing -- acute narrowing of
the coronary artery. We also
know from studies done at
Cedars, by my colleague, Dr.
(UNINTELLIGIBLE), that mental
stress can provoke reduction of
blood flow to the heart, and you
can document that. So, there's
no question that stress can have
adverse consequences, especially
if you already have the disease,
it can only add to that risk.
KING: We'll be back with our
remaining moments on this very
special day. It's the American
Heart Association's "Go Red for
Women" campaign, being
spearheaded by the first lady
and that's why we're all wearing
red and so involved in focusing
the attention on women and heart
disease. We'll be right back.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
LAURA BUSH, FIRST LADY: I hope
people will wear red on Friday.
Wear a red tie if you're a man
or a red dress or suit if you're
a woman, to get the message out
that heart disease is the No. 1
killer of American women. And
the good news about that is that
women can change their
lifestyle, and heart disease is
-- can be preventable
(END VIDEO CLIP)
KING: Since we're discussing
women tonight, and we're in our
remaining moments, Dr. Shah
wanted to point out another
thing, particularly to women.
SHAH: Yeah, some women,
particularly young women, who
may be completely healthy
otherwise, with normal
cholesterol, nonsmokers, no high
blood pressure, no diabetes, no
family history, can, on rare
occasions suddenly get a heart
attack when the inner lining of
their coronary artery tears
apart, separates, and causes an
abrupt closure of the artery,
this is called coronary
dissection. This occurs five to
10 times more commonly in women
than in men. With otherwise
perfect normal arteries, they
can just fall apart and trigger
a heart attack. We don't know
why. It's light lightning
striking them.
KING: Do they recover?
SHAH: Many of will recover, some
will die and in some, we can put
a stint and open the artery,
some require bypass surgery. The
point that I want to make is
that women, when they get severe
chest pain, even if they are
young, even if they are
otherwise healthy, never assume
that it cannot be heart, because
it can be heart, and it may be
due to this peculiar coronary
dissection. It's rare, but it
does happen.
KING: Are you saying that anyone
watching this show, women, men,
anyone, you get severe chest
pain, you call 911.
SHAH: Absolutely.
JACKSON: You bet.
SHAH: Don't call your doctor,
don't call your spouse, call
911. You want to be taken to the
hospital.
KING: It's a wasted time...
SHAH: Absolutely.
KING: Dr. Agatston, do you
agree?
AGATSTON: Yeah. Because the
quicker you get to the hospital,
the quicker an obstructed vessel
can be opened and that's a time
when the invasive procedures are
wonderful. You can open an
artery the sooner you get to the
hospital, the sooner it's open,
the better the chance that it
stays open and that you really
abort the heart attack.
KING: And the people on those
emergency vehicles that come to
get you know what to do, don't
they?
SHAH: By and large, yes.
JACKSON: They are wonderful.
KING: They're well trained?
SHAH: The paramedics are very
well trained and they are life
savers. No question about it.
JACKSON: It's better to go to
the hospital in one of those
vehicles than to have someone
drive to you the hospital or
take a cab.
SHAH: The worse the thing you
can do is have someone drive
you.
JACKSON: Yeah, that's not a good
idea: SHAH: Because if your
heart stops en route, there's
nothing they can do. While if
you are in the paramedic
ambulance, they can revive you.
And the risk of a heart stopping
is the highest in the first hour
to two after a heart attack.
That's the most vulnerable
period when the heart suddenly
completely stops. So you don't
want to be in a situation where
there is no expert help
available en route.
KING: In my case, I did not have
chest pain, I had shoulder pain.
It went straight down my
shoulder. I never had chest
pain.
SHAH: Yeah, a lot of
manifestations of heart attack
do not involve chest pain at
all.
KING: Sometimes people get...
SHAH: Jaw, chest, throat,
shoulder and sometimes back
pain. They can all be
manifestations -- I had a
patient who once had eye pain,
as a manifestation of heart
attack. She went to the
ophthalmologist and he said, I
don't find anything wrong with
your eye. She came to see us, we
gave her an EKG, and she was
having a heart attack. And it
was eye pain which is a rare
thing, but pain in other parts
of the body can be a
manifestation of a heart attack.
KING: The heart -- yes, Doctor,
go ahead.
AGATSTON: Yeah, there was a
famous cardiologist, Dr. Lyon
(ph), in Boston whose brother
was a dentist and he learned
about the signs of heart attack
and several times people came to
him with jaw pain that he
realized was not the teeth, but
was heart and got them to the
hospital.
KING: Well, we should all be
encouraged with the more we
learn.
DUKE: The hope I'm hearing here
is spectacular and I think it is
what women and men need when
something happens, some sort of
crisis happens that could be
heart.
KING: And this "Go for Red,"
great idea.
GARTH: Yes, and just to educate
and inspire women to take better
care of their hearts and health.
I think, I for one, have had an
eye- opening, and I think I
might be going home with Dr.
Shah, if that's OK?
KING: Very helpful, right, Kate?
JACKSON: Oh, yeah.
KING: The more you do, the more
we do?
JACKSON: And the more we talk
about it and the more we talk
about prevention, because, you
know, it's preventable, 80 to 90
percent. Isn't that right, 80 to
90 percent of heart disease is
preventable? You can -- you
don't have to have it.
KING: Well, I thank you all very
much for an illuminating hour
and I want to thank everybody
involved, they are Patty Duke,
Jennie Garth, Kate Jackson, Dr.
P.K. Shah, and in Miami Dr.
Arthur Agatston the author of
those best-selling South Beach
Diet books. I think they're the
best-selling diet books ever
written.
I want to thank our friends at
our own Larry King Cardiac
Foundation, as well. You want to
contact them at LKCF.org. You
can stay tuned now for "Anderson
Cooper 360." Tomorrow night
we'll repeat the interview with
Dominick Dunn, on Sunday night,
Jimmy Carter. Surprise guest on
Monday night that we cannot
promote. I'm going to pick
Pittsburgh to win the Super
Bowl, hey, it's one or the
other. "AC 360" is next --
Anderson.

The show took place on
February 3, 2006
on
CNN Network.
This transcript has been
edited for the purposes of
placing on the web
by Christos Spirou. I have
corrected a few of the minor
spelling errors and a few
other things.
No profit or copyright
infringement intended. |