April 2012  

Vol 7, Issue 4       


               Artey Trademark

It's My Heart Newsletter

IMH Monthly Spotlight

 

 With Spring officially here, we can't help but feel a sense of renewal and revival. So, naturally this seems like the perfect time to renew and revive our blog! That's right - if you haven't heard yet, IMH has a brand new CHD blog! We're so excited because it's going to offer so many opportunities for sharing, learning, and spreading awareness! To better understand what you can find on our blog site, here is a schedule of the post topics...

 

Mondays: CHD in the News & Media -Spotlighting current news stories about CHD, medical advances, and CHD inspired media. One example we've included is a post about the book "Walk on Water," the story of acclaimed pediatric cardio thoracic surgeon, Dr. Roger Mee.

Tuesdays: Guest blogger - We will feature "heart bloggers" who contribute various information, experiences, and opinions regarding CHDs.   

Wednesdays: Heart Stories - We will spotlight a new heart story each week! Here is an excerpt of a Heart Story featured on our blog site...

"Andre was born with a congenital heart defect called severe Pulmonary Valve Stenosis. It was in February 2008, six months into the pregnancy, that we learned the news. After a routine ultrasound at Beverly Hospital, the ob-gyn noticed an enlargement in the right side of the heart. She immediately scheduled us for an Ultrasound II at Tufts Medical Center in Boston. As we watched the monitor together with the technician who was performing the echocardiogram, we asked questions, not really understanding what we were facing. An hour later, we learned what was to be the beginning of a long road of uncertainty..."                    

(You can read the rest of this story here.)  If you'd like to submit your story, please send it and a picture to info@chdblog.org.

 
Thursdays: CHD Advocacy and Practical Advice - These posts will focus on various CHD topics. They will offer advice, tips, resources, and more!

 

 

We hope you'll visit, continue to follow, and share our CHD blog!

  

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World Marathoner to support It's My Heart!

Gavin Thompson had a simple idea last April that has now become a reality! His idea was to run five marathons on 5 continents in 5 weeks: the 5in5on5.

His journey will start in Beijing where he will travel to London for the Virgin London Marathon. From there he will travel to Centurion in South Africa for the Wally Hayward marathon and then to Vancouver for the BMO Vancouver marathon. The fourth leg of his journey will take him to Melbourne, Australia for the Great Ocean Road marathon. Lastly, he will travel to Singapore for the Sundown marathon.

He will be running for a great cause - six children's charities in fact, one of which is It's My Heart.

Thompson works for Wood Mackenize and one of his co-workers is part of It's My Heart and has a son with Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome.

He is covering all of his costs so all money raised goes straight to the charities.

You can follow his amazing journey here
 

 

 

 

Heart Links

 
 
 
 



 


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Sharing our Heart Journeys 
 

We invite you to share your personal Heart Journey story with our CHD community! They are featured on our IMH CHD Blog.  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 to go with your story and submit it to info@chdblog.org.  To read these stories (or to see our other blog topics related to CHD's), please visit our CHD blog .   

CHD in the News 
 

Discovery in SF could unlock origins of heart defects
 

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

 

 

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- A discovery by Bay Area researchers could help unlock the origins of life-threatening heart defects and someday, perhaps cure them before they take hold.

 

More than a million people in the U.S. suffer from congenital heart disease, but now researchers at San Francisco's Gladstone Institutes believe a kind of genetic switch, flipped in the wrong position before birth, could be responsible for at least some of those cases.

 

"Normally, when we think about heart development or the formation of any organ, we usually think about what genes do we need to turn on so that tissue becomes what it's supposed to be," Dr. Benoit Bruneau explains. Instead, he and his team decided to do the opposite. Using a mouse model, they turned off a master gene that regulates the development of cells into cardiac myocytes, which ultimately form the tissue of the heart. He says they expected those cells to lose the ability to develop. "It was a real shocker when we saw these mice walking around with structurally normal hearts," Bruneau says.

 

In fact, the animals developed normally in the uterus and showed no outward signs of heart problems at birth. However, the Gladstone teams believes that what happened next could hold clues to the formation of heart defects in humans and potentially lead to a new way to treat them. Bruneau's team kept monitoring the animals and while they were born normally, he says they began to develop a deadly defect as they continued to grow. "We ended up with mice that were born, but then their hearts became massive. They had massing enlarged hearts," Bruneau says.

 

He believes the enlarged hearts were likely caused by a second gene that was meant to be turned on or off after birth by the gene regulator they had removed. If researchers were able to find markers for similar malfunctioning genes in humans, there is the potential of treating heart defects in the womb. "They're only discovered once they've already happened. If we could find earlier markers and earlier intervention to prevent them in the first place, that would be the ideal scenario," Bruneau says.

 

Bruneau says the team's next goal is to find out how other genes in the heart are regulated. He says the information could ultimately lead to a genomic blueprint of how a heart becomes a heart.

 

 

(Copyright ©2012 KGO-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.) 

 

You can view the video of this news report here

 

 

   




April CHD Birthdays

          

Happy Birthday to...

 

Samaria Martin ~ turning five on April 4th ~ Ebstein's Anomaly, Single Ventricle Physiology, 3 years post fontan

  

Joshua ~ He will be 3 on April 28th ~ TOF, PA, CAVC, ASD, VSD, MVR and CHARGE Syndrome
Gabriel Stanton ~ April 30, 2008 ~ DORV, Pulmonary Stenosis, VSD
Maribeth Gillis ~ April 30, 1985 (27 yrs) ~ HLHS
 

 

 

Delaney Novak ~ April 4, 2002 ~ Tetralogy of Fallot with Pulmonary Atresia ~ Received a Melody valve on March 13

 

 

Katelyn Mae ~ April 14th ~ DCM diagnosed at 5 weeks old; Heart transplant July 3, 2011
Eli Thomas Ferrell ~ April 23, 2008 ~ HLHS; Fontan surgery early this year

 

  

 

 

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

TCH

 

 

 

 

 

 

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