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Old 11-25-2008, 07:36 AM   #1 (permalink)
BJones
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 29
Default Restarting after Angioplasty

NOTE: This is a copy of what I posted on another JP forum, but I think this one is more appropriate.

I started the NROL in the summer, using the "Eternal Beginner" program, and was making good progress. I hit a few bumps (like lower back pain, from poor form), but overall was pleased with how it was going.

In September, I started experiencing chest pain (kind of a squeezing tightness/burning) with exertion - that would stop almost immediately if I stopped whatever activity I was doing. I actually first noticed it while out walking the dog. Because of it, I started backing off of the workouts. I eventually saw my doctor, in October, who set up an appointment with a cardiologist two days later. In the intervening day, I had a much more intense chest epsiode, that had the pain radiating down both arms.

The next day, the cardiologist put me in the hospital for a heart catheterization (angiogram) about 15 minutes after we met. They found a 95+% blockage of the left anterior descending artery (LAD - aka "the widow-maker") and put in a stent to relieve it (angioplasty). Everything worked well, there was no damage to my heart, and I feel great.

My current prognosis is excellent. Amusingly, I was told that this was due to my youth (52) and fitness (hah!). My cholesterol (at 245 this summer) was down to 156 at the time of the angioplasty - so the food charting I started this summer (using the spreadsheet I got from the NROL forum) helped.

I have been cleared to resume exercising - but not completely. I am not to run/jog or lift strenously until January. For now, I can walk (I'm doing 3-5 miles every other day) and do "light" weight lifting.

My question is about the "light" weight lifting. He wasn't too specific, he just said to keep my discomfort level low while exercising. In January, he said to bump it up to around 7 on a scale of 1-10.

After talking with a few folks, I realized that my old weight lifting routine (well, it was almost a routine) would not be appropriate. Anyone out there with a good strength-based program for fitness after a heart procedure?

Thanks,

Bill
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