New Lease On Life For Heart Valve Patients
URBANA - At 94 years old, every day counts for Jim Bier. The Champaign, Illinois, resident, U.S. Army veteran, and retired map-maker is able to manage things like visiting the store and strolling his backyard gardens – a space resembling the University of Illinois Japan House gardens, which Bier designed . It all comes with less chest pain and easier breathing thanks to a minimally-invasive heart procedure offered at OSF HealthCare. “I’ve been at home, exercising, building up my legs, and I don't have the difficulties breathing like I did before all this happened back in the garden days,” Bier says. “And so I would say I'm in very good shape at this point.” Bier pauses and adds with a chuckle, “From my waist up. I still have to work on my legs.” Approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2011 , transcatheter aortic valve replacement, or TAVR for short, deals with a thickened aortic valve in the heart that can’t fully
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