My Heart Failure Handbook: Blog #3.

Two questions were recently asked…

1) What do you mean, “changed your life forever?”

and

2) You mentioned 550,000 Heart Failures per year, what other statistics should we be aware of?

1) Prior to Heart Failure, I was a long-distance runner for 48 years. I enjoyed the outdoor runs, the notoriety, and the stress reduction it afforded me.

My third day in Intensive Care, four of the six cardiologists who cared for me gathered around my bed to tell me I was responding very well. One cardiologist (who was a marathoner) told me point blank that I would never run again because my heart would not withstand it due to the damage of my Left Ventricle. He said that I could walk and/or jog, but that if I wanted to live, I had to give up something. That something was the thing that gave me personal satisfaction, that allowed me to eat anything I wanted, that helped my body be healthy and helped control my personal and business stressors: running.

Obviously, my diet changed considerably with decreased sodium, sugar, and starches.
The necessity to take four medicines every day changed my breakfast routine and my mental outlook on medicines. I’d never needed to take any long-term medicines during my previous 64 years!

And lastly, my stress needed to be reduced; that entailed cutting back my workload by 67% to 3 – 5 hour days per week.

All of that changed my life.

2) The other statistics.

  • Yes, there are over 550,000 heart failure events yearly.
  • The average age is 64.5 years old.
  • Average life expectancy after Heart Failure is 7 years.
  • Survival rates following Heart Failure are 90% at 1 year, 60% at 5 years and 27% at 10 years.
  • Most Heart Failure events require CPR or, better yet, electrical defibrillation.
  • Heart failure accounted for 45% of cardiovascular deaths in the US in 2021.
  • Between ages 60 and 75 men and women’s rate of events are about equal. Before 60 years of age, men have three times as many Heart Failure events. After 75 years of age, women have more Heart Failure events.
  • 28% of people who died from Heart Failure also had diabetes.
  • 16% of people who died from Heart Failure deaths also had COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease).
  • A common monitor of Heart Failure progress is the Left Ventricular Effusion Fraction, (EF). The EF should be 50 to 70%. Below 41% medical (specifically cardiological) care is recommended.
  • According to Medical News Today, Atrial Fibrillation (A-fib) often results in heart attack or stroke while Ventricular Fibrillation (V-fib) is typically more serious.
  • Heart Failure is additionally broken down into Systolic (when the heart pumps blood into the arteries) versus Diastolic (when the heart is at rest and between heartbeats) Heart Failure.

I hope these statistics are helpful and the questions asked have been answered.


Any questions sent to this blog will be addressed the following week when possible. I may not always have an answer, but I will offer the most holistic and natural response I can.

Lastly, if anything you read proves to be helpful to you (or someone you care about) I ask you to send $19 (or $20) to :
Dr Mark Fullerton
c/o Edward Jones
9271 Reidville Rd Greer, SC 29651.

This is my way of leaving something for my family and loved ones when I do pass.

Next Time - Hygiene and Heart Failure Prevention

My Heart Failure Handbook: Blog #2.

Simplified Heart Physiology, or “Why Me”

Your heart is basically a large muscle that is very complicated in how it works.

The human heart is divided into four parts (or Chambers): the top right is the Right Atrium, bottom right is the Right Ventricle, top left is the Left Atrium and the bottom left is the Left Ventricle.

Blood is sucked from the body into the Right Atrium and passes down to the Right Ventricle. The blood is then pumped to the lungs to be oxygenated. The Pulmonary Vein transfers the blood from the lungs to the Left Atrium, which acts as a sucking mechanism. The blood then passes from the Left Atrium to the Left Ventricle and is pumped out of the body to all the different areas via the Aorta.

This simplified explanation of how the heart works gives us a working knowledge to explain why anyone who has had Heart Failure usually wants to know… “Why Me.”

There are four main possibilities…

1) There can either be fluid in or around the heart. This could be due to several different reasons but it does cause the heart to work too hard and eventually get out of sync. This interruption requires defibrillation and is called Heart Failure.

2) A problem with a valve inside the heart means that the blood is stuck in the heart and not pumped out; therefore, it causes the heart to get out of sync and results in Heart Failure.

3) A blockage in the arteries that will not allow the blood to flow out into the body, again causing the blood to back up and the heart to go out of sync, resulting in Heart Failure.

4) Infection. It doesn’t necessarily have to be in the heart, though it can be. Infections in the foot, leg, mouth, or anywhere in the body (internally or externally) can cause that bacterial, viral, strep or other infection to travel through the bloodstream. This infection then alters normal function when it passes through the heart and results in Heart Failure.

Obviously, there are other possibilities not mentioned here. The main thing to remember is that not everyone dies from Heart Failure. When the heart stops, it needs to be defibrillated (or put back into sync) so it can supply the body with oxygenated blood.

Defibrillation can save a life, but it is not a guarantee. If the heart damage is too bad, it may not be able to be resuscitated.

Many of the 550,000 annual Heart Failure patients can’t be resuscitated.

Proper defibrillation training and timing is of the utmost importance.


Any questions sent to this blog will be addressed the following week when possible. I may not always have an answer, but I will offer the most holistic and natural response I can.

Lastly, if anything you read proves to be helpful to you (or someone you care about) I ask you to send $19 (or $20) to :
Dr Mark Fullerton
c/o Edward Jones
9271 Reidville Rd Greer, SC 29651.

This is my way of leaving something for my family and loved ones when I do pass.

Next Week - Statistics for Heart Failure Patients

My Heart Failure Handbook: Blog #1.

Thursday, October 22, 2020…the day that changed my life forever.

I had planned to get up that morning and run three—maybe four—miles before going to work. Instead, I was awakened at 5:15 am by a strange feeling in the middle of my chest and my hands and feet fully contracted. After struggling to sit up on the edge of my bed, I took a number of very deep breaths until my hands and feet relaxed enough that I could walk to the other side of the bed and tell my wife, “Something is wrong, I need to go to the hospital.”

I dressed myself and 6 minutes later we were walking into the emergency room at our local hospital. They rushed me back to an emergency operating room, cut off my clothes (which, by the way, were one of my favorite pants and running shirts), and sedated me. As I learned later, the surgeon implanted a stent in the main artery of my heart because it was 80% blocked.

Later that same day, after I expired twice and was resuscitated, I was air lifted to another hospital 73 miles away because they could not revive me with the damage my heart had experienced. I only remember the trip’s bumps: the first bump getting on the plane (because the life support equipment was too heavy for the helicopter to handle), a bump mid-flight, and the bump going into the hospital.

All of that is to say that I am not a Cardiologist, I am a Chiropractor. As such, any recovery and defense ideas I will be offering are holistic, natural, and effective as I have personally found in my heart failure experience.

In the next 50 weekly blogs we will explain, with simplicity: Heart Physiology; Diet; Exercise; Danger Signs; Oxygen and Water importance; Holistic Healing disciplines; medications and Supplements; Dental Issues; Foot and Leg Issues; Balance; Loss of Memory; Healing From Within; Walking, Jogging, and Running; and other pertinent topics.

Statistically, 550,000 people will experience heart failure this year. Over 4 million others will be directly affected by their heart failures.

Any questions sent to this blog will be addressed the following week when possible. I may not always have an answer, but I will offer the most holistic and natural response I can.

Lastly, if anything you read proves to be helpful to you (or someone you care about) I ask you to send $19 (or $20) to :
Dr Mark Fullerton
c/o Edward Jones
9271 Reidville Rd Greer, SC 29651.

This is my way of leaving something for my family and loved ones when I do pass.

Next Week - Simplified Heart Physiology, or Why Me?