The Province

Hockey legend pays it forward after great save

Howie Meeker helping raise funds for Victoria hospital after it gave 94-year-old a new lease on life

- CINDY E. HARNETT VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST ceharnett@timescolon­ist.com

VICTORIA — NHL great Howie Meeker skated from a death sentence to a new lease on life with the help of a Victoria cardiac specialist and a $1.75-million piece of equipment.

Now Meeker is telling his story to help the Victoria Hospitals Foundation raise money to pay for that equipment.

“It was a wonderful ride. I met wonderful physicians and our medical system really is unmatched. No one else in the world is looked after any better,” said Meeker from his waterfront home in French Creek.

When Meeker was 16, his unhealthy heart was detected during a physical exam, so he was denied entry into the Royal Canadian Air Force. He got into the army, however, and served three years.

The diagnosis didn’t stop him from playing sports, becoming an NHL star with his name on the Stanley Cup four times. The Order of Canada recipient is also a former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MP and was a colour commentato­r on Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts.

Meeker, now 94, was dealing with another procedure when he was diagnosed with aortic stenosis. It’s a condition caused by normal wear and tear of heart valves and causes the heart to work harder to pump blood due to calcium deposits in the valves.

The result is chest pain or angina, laboured breathing, bouts of unconsciou­sness and possibly a heart attack. Untreated patients have a life expectancy of about two years.

Medication helps but does not reverse the damage. In Meeker’s case, open-heart valve surgery was not an option because of his age.

“They said there’s a solution but it’s very rare and it’s very new, and the best group of doctors in that treatment in all of Canada was right down in Victoria at Royal Jubilee Hospital,” said Meeker.

A meeting with interventi­onal cardiologi­st Dr. Anthony Della Siega, 49, at Royal Jubilee Hospital cardiac centre, changed Meeker’s fate.

Della Siega knew a procedure called TAVI (transcathe­ter aortic valve implantati­on) was the answer.

This life-saving procedure can be performed in an hour or less without general anesthetic, said Della Siega. After it’s inserted, the new biomedical valve works within moments and allows blood to once again flow freely throughout the body.

“Both sides of my heart are pumping equally now; it was a wonderful experience by a courageous bunch of people,” said Meeker.

As part of its Cardiac Care Campaign, the Victoria Hospitals Foundation is hoping to raise $3.2 million for 34 pieces of specialize­d cardiac care equipment.

The most expensive piece of equipment to be funded this year is the $1.75-million C-arm.

A 10-year-old version was replaced about two months ago, and now the foundation needs to pay for it.

“With the aid of the Victoria Hospitals Foundation, it allows us to get this equipment in a timely fashion when we need it to have the best equipment to do our job the best we can,” said Della Siega.

Meeker said he was pleased to meet the cardiac specialist, and Della Siega said he was pleased to again meet the man who coached him in a hockey camp 40 years ago.

“He’s a wonderful man.”

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HOWIE MEEKER

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