Category Archives: heart surgery

Money in this piggy bank

I consider the hero of this story to be, at the very least, terrific. Radiant. Humble.

Some pig.

With apologies to E.B. White, and a nod to those exalting descriptions in “Charlotte’s Webb” of White’s protagonist barnyard critter Wilbur, I am speaking instead of an anonymous real-life porker. Mine was a domesticated, omnivorous mammal belonging to the genus Sus who lived, I assume, somewhere in Iowa (based on the odds, since that is the leading state for hog production) .

That particular pig somehow had been designated an organ donor. And when—on the medical advice of my cardiologist, given the heart murmur I developed several years ago—I was judged in need of an aortic valve replacement, the aforementioned swine (and I use that term with ultimate respect) supplied the needed equipment.

That life-sustaining procedure indeed became a variant on bringing home the bacon. Not that I will tolerate any petty puns related to my circumstance or my benefactor. To eat ham or pork or sausage—which I rarely do, anyway—does not make me a cannibal. I do not have increased leanings toward a chauvinist pig. In basketball, I believe is passing to the open man, eschewing the role of ball hog.

Of course I am fully aware that, as a cultural symbol, the pig is employed as a stand-in for many human aspects, often derogatory: As slang for police (a “pig” is on the dismissive level of “the fuzz”). As an informal insult of someone perceived to be disgusting or greedy.

In George Orwell’s 1945 satire “Animal Farm,” about anthropomorphic creatures who rebel against their human farmer in hopes of creating a society of equal, free and happy animals, a pig named Napoleon is the bad guy, emerging as the dictator who causes the farm to wind up in a state worse than before. (Orwell was referencing Joseph Stalin of the early 20th Century Soviet Union, but his allegory somehow feels relevant to the United States in 2025.)

Meanwhile, it could be argued that the Looney Tunes character Porky Pig, with his terrible stutter, was not such a good model for an earlier generation of cartoon-watching children. And, in the Chinese Zodiac legend, the Year of the Pig is last in its 12-year calendar cycle because, when the Emperor organized a race to ascertain the order of animals in the Zodiac, the pig arrived late—last—and was thereby termed the “lazy pig,” who had stopped to eat and fell asleep.

Then again, the third of the Three Little Pigs was resourceful and brilliant, clever enough to fortify his house against the wolf with bricks. Miss Piggy, of Muppets lore, may have been a bit temperamental, a diva superstar, but knew a little French and was a terror in karate. Hiiii-YAH!

I never quite got the nursery rhyme about little pigs who respectfully “went to market, stayed home, had roast beef, got nothing at all and cried all the way home,” paired with a grownup simultaneously pulling on a young child’s toes. But let me be on record as a fan of the Beatles 1968 song “Piggies,” a George Harrison number which has been interpreted as a metaphor for human nature, in which the big guys lord it over the lesser folks. (2025 again?)

Anyway, to dismiss the contribution of my Iowa patron, whose aorta valve has kept me rolling along these last six years; who has, unknowingly, allowed me to feel as normally active as any septuagenarian around? In a pig’s eye!

Just sorta fixed my aorta

It was as close as I’ll ever get to resembling Michael Phelps: Undergoing the complete removal of body hair, from the neck down, in preparation for a significant occurrence.

In the case of Phelps and other elite swimmers, shaving their arms, legs, backs, armpits and chests is a time-honored ritual in pursuit of the slightest edge in major international competition. The practice may be as much a psyche job as a physical benefit; former Olympic champion John Naber once explained it by recalling how comedian Steve Martin “used to say that he put a slice of baloney in his shoes before he performed to help him feel funny. Well, shaving helps you feel fast.”

Me? I was obliged to undergo a thorough depilation as an essential bit of readiness prior to open-heart surgery. The hospital orderly wielding electric clippers kept assuring me of the need to eliminate any bacteria that may cling to body hair. Anyway, since that pre-event pageantry—like a ribbon-cutting or breaking a bottle of champagne over a ship’s bow—occurred before the administration of anesthesia, it’s about all I remember about the whole process.

As my wife has noted, I emerged from the post-op fog repeatedly asking, “When are they going to do the surgery?”

By then, of course, I was hooked up to an IV drip, nasal oxygen prongs, blood-pressure cuff, bladder catheter and heart monitor, with a small plastic drainage tube protruding from my torso. And still there was some sense that the entire deal might have been a parlor trick, a sawing-the-woman-in-half illusion. I can’t say I ever was in any real pain. Some degree of post-operative discomfort and boredom, yes.

The team of surgeons—and let’s hear it for the best in modern medicine—had carved a four-inch opening in my sternum in order to fix a badly leaking aortic valve, then glued me back together, all in about three hours. For the next few days, I was fed pills of various shapes, colors and functions—some to get rid of extra fluids, some to counter dehydration, some to insure against an irregular heartbeat, some to regulate cholesterol, maybe a couple of placebos, for all I know.

I suppose that people in my age bracket, almost three-quarters of a century without having shuffled off this mortal coil, have an increasing likelihood of such adventures. Body parts start to wear out, and it had been a year-and-a-half since my primary-care doctor, during a routine physical, detected a heart murmur. That led to a visit with a cardiologist and occasional monitoring of the situation—without any lifestyle changes—until the most recent round of tests precipitated the human equivalent of a service recall.

I was informed by my surgeon that the necessary repair would be accomplished via a “minimally invasive” procedure and that there was only a one percent chance I wouldn’t make it through. Just in case, though, my wife lined up two Broadway plays and a ballet the week before surgery. The kind of things you can’t take with you.

It turned out there was no rush for such unrestricted leisure. Hours after surgery, I was walking the hospital halls. Four days after the valve job, I was sent home. Ten days on, my cardiologist said that four—maybe five—weeks hence, I could expect to resume my daily morning runs.

Meanwhile, there was a lot of paperwork involved. Too many afternoon naps. Some bad jokes about male chauvinism now that my replacement part is the valve of a pig. But, all in all, it was just another episode in the continuing saga of advanced maturity.

The hairs have grown back, by the way. But don’t worry; nobody is going to see me in a swimming pool, much less a Speedo.