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Ticker
Ticker: The Quest to Create an Artificial Heart | Mimi Swartz
8 posts | 5 read | 7 to read
In Ticker, Texas Monthly executive editor and two-time National Magazine Award winner Mimi Swartz takes readers behind the scenes of perhaps the greatest medical and technological quest of our time, as she follows pioneering heart surgeon O. H. "Bud" Frazier and his partner, Dr. Billy Cohn, in Frazier's lifelong effort to develop, perfect, and successfully implant an artificial heart in patients whose hearts are failing. In Ticker, renowned journalist Mimi Swartz takes readers on an incredible behind-the-scenes journey into a heart surgeon's epic quest to develop an artificial heart--a reliable, implantable device that would extend the lives of patients who have no other recourse. As director of cardiovascular surgery at the Texas Heart Institute, and arguably the foremost heart surgeon in the world, Bud Frazier's lifelong mission, since his stint in the war in Vietnam, has been to save lives by creating an artificial heart for those whose hearts are failing. There are 50,000 people on the waiting list for a heart transplant at any given time, with fewer than 2,500 transplants performed each year. Chronicling the evolution of cardiac medicine, from pioneering efforts in open heart surgery and bypass operations under Michael DeBakey and Denton Cooley, to the advent of valve replacement and heart transplants, and protege Bud Frazier's introduction of the Left Ventricle Assist Device (or LVAD) that Vice President Cheney used for a decade before his successful heart transplant, Swartz follows Frazier and his partner Billy Cohn as they feverishly design, develop, and test new heart designs. In a gripping narrative that takes readers from the operating theater to the basement of the famed Texas Heart Institute, where calves are implanted with the new heart devices and monitored meticulously, to the relentless quest for funding, as government research money dries up, Swartz has created an unputdownable narrative that weaves together science, research, technology, and the relentless obsession of a surgeon determined to extend patients' lives.
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jenniferw88
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Mehso-so
Cinfhen Hi Jenny!!! Hope you‘re doing well 💗💗💗 3y
TheAromaofBooks Great progress!!! 3y
alisiakae 👍😎 3y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Good job!! I actually read this ARC and liked some parts but it wasn‘t my fave medically-oriented nonfiction. 3y
62 likes4 comments
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jenniferw88
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TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! 4y
jenniferw88 @TheAromaofBooks just tried the first chapter of Lake Charles and bailed on it... not for me! 3y
TheAromaofBooks That happens sometimes!! 3y
56 likes3 comments
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jenniferw88
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Christmas book haul! I also got a Waterstones gift card so will be buying some from there, as well as the books I'll order off Amazon for a challenge competition I won on Goodreads! I think all of these are #blameitonlitsy!

CaroPi Every time that I was going to England I was in Waterstones... I really like it those bookstores 6y
Birdsong28 Madame Tussaud is such a good book. 📚📖 6y
Dragon 👍📚💚🎄🐉 6y
134 likes3 comments
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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Pickpick

Developing an artificial heart is a long, complex process. Mimi Swartz breaks down the efforts by some Houston cardiac surgeons into manageable pieces. Then she weaves them together with medicine, technology, and history to create a very readable book.

Full review www.TheBibliophage.com
#thebibliophage2018 #thanksnetgalley

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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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I‘m still catching up on ARCs. Found this on Scribd, so I‘m going in! I love a good medically-related NF book.

92 likes1 stack add
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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

Ticker details efforts in Houston to develop the first artificial heart, traversing the history of heart surgery and major developments along the way. This is written for the general reader and is quite interesting, but does leave out most of the contributions from outside Houston. That said, I found it enjoyable.

37 likes3 stack adds
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Kappadeemom
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Today we finish up our fiscal year. I work for the American Heart Association and manage a team of fundraisers (6 of them) in Georgia and Florida. We didn‘t hit our goal of $1.65 million today; however, we raised $1.3 million. I‘m proud of my team but so sad that I didn‘t do more. Licking my wounds this afternoon, drinking a bottle of wine and crying a few tears. I am proud of my team and what we do, but #Ineedaminute

alisiakae As a former development director for a nonprofit, I can relate. Take some time for self-care, knowing you worked your hardest! Hugs 🤗 7y
SledgeReader Always seeking library funding and best friends with development director for NPR. Take a bit to relax. Enjoy your weekend of Beer, Boat and Books. Monday will look a lot better. Your team is blessed to have you! Thanks for all you do! ❤️ 7y
Kappadeemom @4thhouseontheleft @SledgeReader thank you both. Disappointed today but off until July 9th. That day will begin a new slate and much better outlook 🙏 7y
See All 10 Comments
Christine So sorry you are feeling disappointed... but thank you so much for what you do! I have a son with HLHS, so my respect and gratitude for your efforts are limitless! ❤️❤️❤️ And enjoy your well-earned time off! 🙂 6y
Kappadeemom @christine oh wow! How old is your son? 6y
Kappadeemom @Christine and you may want to read this book. I just started it, so only about 40 pages in. 6y
Christine Yes, this book caught my attention for sure, of course! My son is 11 and he‘s been lucky heart-wise...has only had the three standard surgeries for HLHS and no other procedures needed since. (He‘s bothered more by the mild CP and seizures he has as a result of a stroke he had in surgery recovery as an infant, sigh - but his heart function has always been great thanks to those miraculous surgeries. :) 6y
CoffeeK8 Yes thank you so much for your work... I was born with TOF (currently well controlled) and I so appreciate all you do! 6y
Kappadeemom @Christine @CoffeeK8 Thank you ladies for sharing your stories. My first husband passed away at 29 from SCA which is what made me want to work at AHA. Stories like yours sure cheer me up when I feel like I didn‘t do enough, which is basically how it feels most days when heart disease is still the #1 killer 🙏 6y
Christine So sorry for your loss, but so grateful that it inspired you to do such important work! And thanks for sharing, @CoffeeK8 - so glad you are doing well! ❤️ 6y
49 likes10 comments
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Kappadeemom
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