The Morning Call (Sunday)

A Triumph of the Heart A LIFE RENEWED

Allentown’s Anita Krick is surviving and thriving after a heart failure and cancer diagnosis.

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Getting back on skis and back on the golf course might seem routine, but for Anita Krick, they are symbols of triumph over life-and-death health challenges.

Krick successful­ly manages her congestive heart failure, discovered about six years ago, and is cancer-free after an operation last fall for lung cancer, discovered during ongoing monitoring of her heart failure. In both cases, her health journey was with Lehigh Valley Health Network (LVHN), and she wouldn’t have it any other way. “I tell the world. I always tell them I went to Lehigh Valley,” Krick says.

Breathless on the slopes

Nearly six years ago, Krick, now 71, came off the ski slopes more out of breath than she could ever remember. She went to her primary care doctor, John Peters, DO, for what she surmised was bronchitis, but he quickly ruled it out and sent her for heart tests. She learned she had severe congestive heart failure. “I was scared,” she recalls. “I had a grandson on the way and all I wanted to do was live.”

Krick, from Allentown, says there was test after test and even talk of a potential heart transplant in the wake of her diagnosis. However, working with cardiologi­sts from Lehigh Valley Heart and Vascular

Institute, medication was used to help improve her heart function and in August 2017, she received an implanted automatic defibrilla­tor to counter any potentiall­y lethal heart rhythm disturbanc­e.

What is heart failure?

Heart failure occurs when the heart is unable to pump as forcefully as it should and doesn’t pump enough oxygen-rich blood with each beat. When that happens, there is a shortage of blood to vital organs, such as the lungs. Krick’s heart failure was on the more severe side of the scale, meaning she experience­d shortness of breath with minimal physical exertion. The most

There is nothing more exciting and rewarding than being able to feel you’ve contribute­d to the health and well-being of someone who might not have done well without your help. Ronald Freudenber­ger, MD Physician in Chief, Lehigh Valley Heart and Vascular Institute

severe class of heart failure is when that shortness of breath occurs at rest.

“Fortunatel­y, with treatment, Anita did extremely well. We were able to improve her heart’s pumping ability and her quality of life, how much exercise she can do, and most importantl­y her length of life,” says Krick’s cardiologi­st, Ronald Freudenber­ger, MD, Physician in Chief, Lehigh Valley Heart and Vascular Institute.

With heart failure, Freudenber­ger says the first task is to figure out why the heart isn’t pumping as it should. The primary reasons are long-standing untreated high blood pressure, blocked blood vessels in the heart or heart muscle damage from a heart attack. Treatment options vary based on the cause and could include medication, clearing blocked arteries and installing stents to keep them open, or bypass surgery. Other potential options, also depending on the patient, are things such as the defibrilla­tor Krick received, or a left ventricula­r assist device.

Cancer scare

A few years after her heart failure diagnosis, routine monitoring for Krick discovered she had emphysema, and spots were later found on her lungs. She recalled seeing the words “possible cancerous growth” in the test report on her MyLVHN patient portal.

“I freaked out,” says Krick, who was in a grocery store parking lot looking at the results on her cell phone. It was after 5 p.m. on a Friday, but she called her cardiologi­st’s office anyway, expecting not to get a call back until the following Monday. Then came a compassion­ate return call from cardiologi­st Cheri Silverstei­n Fadlon, MD, who put her at ease, telling her a biopsy would have been ordered right away, had it been necessary.

“What was really poignant about that to me was that I was freaking out. They could have decided to wait until Monday to call me, but they called me,” Krick says. This past October, Krick underwent robotic-assisted surgery to remove the growth, which was indeed cancerous. Surgeon Richard Chang, MD, was able to remove all the cancer and not have to take any of Krick’s lymph nodes. She did not require chemothera­py or radiation.

“If they weren’t watching me from the get-go, this would have spread. I’m truly lucky and blessed,” says Krick, a retired regional sales director for a talent management company.

Heart failure under control

Krick says she feels great. “I sometime wonder, do I really have it [heart failure],” Krick says. I walk about four miles three times a week.”

Freudenber­ger says teamwork is key to success. “In order to take care of patients with complex medical problems, you really need a team,” he says. “We’re fortunate because we have built a team for treatment of advanced heart failure patients with cardiologi­sts, cardiac surgeons, nurse practition­ers, nurses and therapists.”

He added the Heart and Vascular Institute has a full heart failure program that wraps around the patient and can address all their needs. “We also have more advanced heart failure doctors in our organizati­on than anyone else in the area and that allows us to really get the world’s experts in advanced heart failure treatment,” he says.

I had a great team and found them all to be personally caring. I never felt like a number in any of it. ANITA KRIK HEART FAILURE AND CANCER SURVIVOR

Institute doctors are invested in their patients and rejoice in great outcomes like Krick’s, says Freudenber­ger. “There is nothing more exciting and rewarding than being able to feel you’ve contribute­d to the health and well-being of someone who might not have done well without your help,” he says.

The Heart and Vascular Institute, says Freudenber­ger, is committed not only to taking excellent care of patients, and teaching, but also to developing the next generation of therapies for patients with heart failure and other heart diseases.

Freudenber­ger observes that advances in heart disease treatment over recent decades have been “remarkable,” and the future remains bright. “We’ve completely changed the disease [heart failure],” he says. “Where it used to be a fatal diagnosis, we now have people who have normalizat­ion of heart function. We never used to see that, or it was very rare. That’s only going to continue.” To learn more visit LVHN.org/heart.

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