February 2012  

Vol 7, Issue 2       


               Artey Trademark

It's My Heart Newsletter

IMH Monthly Spotlight

 

We think it's very appropriate that Valentine's Day is this month (or as we might call it, Heart Day)! "Why is it appropriate?" you ask - because our Keep the Beat CHD Awareness Walk is this month, too (Sat., Feb. 18th)! What a great way to celebrate and support all hearts! Some of the ways to be involved with the walk include...

  • walking (with a team or as an individual)
  • volunteering to help at the walk
  • attending the walk to show support
  • donating
  • sponsoring a participant
  • being an event sponsor (or referring an event sponsor)
  • become a "Virtual Walker"
  • for more details on how to get involved, please visit our walk information site

 __________________________

 

Since it's still the beginning of a new year (and there'll be plenty of new chances to spread awareness), if you're in the market for some new CHD gear, check out our IMH online store. You can support a great cause and look good doing so!  

 

 

 

 

Heart Links

 
 
 
 



 


Connect with us!
 
                            IMH Official Website

IMH Facebook

IMH Twitter
Sharing our Heart Journeys 
 

We invite you to share your personal Heart Journey story with our CHD community! They will now be featured on our blog site "Learn About CHD."  If you'd like to have yours featured, please include the following in your story: your (or your child's) diagnosis (how and when), your treatment plan, and an update on how you (or your child) is doing now. Please send a picture(s) to go with your story and submit it to info@learnaboutchd.org.  As soon as we have some submissions and get them posted, you'll be able to read them on our blog site.   


February CHD Birthdays

         

Happy Birthday to...

 

Jake McCathran ~ Born February 1, 2007 ~ Prium ASD/ Sub-aortic Stenosis

 

 

Kayden Blake Holmes ~ Born February 2, 2009

 

Leyda Bouchard ~ Born February 4, 2005 ~ This little CHD angel got her wings on October 22, 2011 from HLHS ~ She would have been 7 years old this year

 

 

Anika Kougias ~ Born February 5, 2004 ~ Total Anomalous Pulmonary Venous Return

 

Joshua Ray Trendle ~ Born February 9, 2011 ~ 2 VSDs and PFO

 

Liam Arndt ~ Born February 9, 2011 ~ He had severe narrowing and blockage of the aortic arch and double outlet right ventricle with VSD ~ He has had 2 open heart surgeries

 

Taylor Sparks ~ Born February 17, 2000 ~ Transposition of the great vessels

 

   

  

 

 

 If your child has a March birthday and you'd like it to be included here next month, please submit a picture, name, and birthdate to newsletter@itsmyheart.org by February 20th.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

TCH

 

 

 

 

 

 


CHD in the News

 

Congenital Heart Patients to Benefit From Wireless, Battery-Free Cardiac Implant  

 

 

ANN ARBOR, Mich., Jan. 25, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ --

The implants - developed by the University of Michigan and the Ann Arbor company, Integrated Sensing Systems, Inc. - will greatly improve care for congenital heart disease patients.

 

A miniature, battery-free, wireless, cardiac implant being developed by a U-M researcher and the Ann Arbor company Integrated Sensing Systems, Inc. (ISSYS), has received important funding that could get it to patients more quickly.

 

A $1.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), will help a research team, led by Martin Bocks, M.D., and ISSYS, Inc., to complete the final preclinical testing required before seeking approval under Food and Drug Administration's Humanitarian Device Exemption pathway. Bocks is a pediatric cardiologist at the University of Michigan Congenital Heart Center and the U-M C.S. Mott Children's Hospital.

 

"We are extremely excited to continue working with ISSYS to develop a wireless, implantable pressure sensor for our patients with complex forms of congenital heart disease," says Bocks, the project's medical principal investigator.

 

"This pressure sensor has the potential to greatly improve the care we provide to our most complex patients and will provide us with unprecedented opportunities to learn more about their unique physiology. We appreciate the NIH and the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) for their willingness to fund research on patients with rare, severe forms of congenital heart disease."

 

Bocks and his team at U-M have been working on this device - which will be used in infants and children -- for three years. The 2.5-year grant will help test a device that will reduce the need for invasive cardiac catheterization procedures and provide a better understanding of congenital heart disease.

 

The device is a wireless, battery-free, miniature pressure sensor that is implanted within a heart chamber, Bocks says. Once implanted, doctors can measure pressure inside the heart while the patient is being seen in the outpatient clinic without having to do a heart catheterization. In the future, such monitoring may be performed remotely or from the home. The device, which would stay in place permanently, is initially planned for use in patients with functional single ventricle conditions, such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome. It could be used in other forms of pediatric and adult heart disease in the future.

 

"We hope it would be going to market by year 2013," Bocks says. "We expect the device to decrease the number of heart catheterizations, help doctors better monitor the effects of medications, and provide early detection for conditions such as blood clots in lungs."

 

"We also hope that it will help us conduct more research," he adds. "We'll be able to obtain information from patients when they are sleeping, or exercising - information we had not been able to get to before."

 

The device is important because it will allow researchers to conduct more tests on these patients, which will lead to better treatments, says Nader Najafi, Ph.D., ISSYS President and CEO and the project's technical principal investigator.

 

"This grant helps us develop wireless, intelligent, miniature implants for patients with congenital and structural heart diseases. It paves the way for the start of clinical studies in infants and children with complex congenital heart defects," he says.

 

"The pediatric medical device field represents unique commercialization challenges due to its small size and stringent requirements," Najafi adds. "We are grateful to the NIH for this needed support for the challenging pediatric device field. The results of this effort will have important spillover effects for broader applications within the field of adult and pediatric cardiovascular medicine."

 

SOURCE University of Michigan Health System

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved 

 

 

 

 

 

Support It's My Heart
Donate Button
Join Our Mailing List!