All Things Heart 2-29-24

Media Resources

Jill Chadwick

News Director

Office: (913) 588-5013

Cell: (913) 223-3974

Email

jchadwick@kumc.edu

Key points from today’s guests:

Sam Platt, quintuple bypass patient

  • As a drummer, life in a band took its toll with frequent fast food stops and living an unhealthy lifestyle.
  • One night in 2022 after a gig, a stomachache turned into a hospital visit.
  • Doctors said he needed a quintuple bypass surgery and he was rushed to The University of Kansas Health System.
  • Sam had blockages in five arteries supplying blood to his heart.
  • They took arteries and veins from his arm to help with the bypass, but it has not impeded his ability to play the drums.
  • He has changed his lifestyle to be more healthy – including eliminating fast food and pop – and people have noticed the differences.
  • He feels so much better and is able to continue playing his music.
  • He recommends people to get their heart checked and be conscious of how they are treating their body.

Dr. Tyler Zorn, thoracic surgeon, The University of Kansas Health System

  • He was treated for a celiac dissection as well as a quintuple bypass.
  • Bypass surgery is re-routing blood flow around blockages in the arteries.
  • We do as much as we can to restore blood flow to the heart so it can last as long as it can.
  • Chest pain, shoulder pain and jaw pain are the more common symptoms of heart issues. General fatigue is another sign that can be missed.
  • These blockages happen over time – years or decades – and they get to the point where they're affecting you in a more chronic way.
  • Suggested scans may be a calcium score or a stress test to help detect issues early.
  • Sam is the ideal patient, understanding he needed to make changes and is doing so.