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  • >>> Paul conway works hard to stay in shape, takes walks around his neighborhood with his

  • wife, grace, and he pumps iron at least three times a week, okay, so he doesn't look like

  • Arnold, but back in his prime he was a competitive body builder.

  • >>> Right now I don't look like I did when I was 22 years old, when I won the border

  • state, I'm glad I won it but now all I can be is the best 53 year old I can.

  • >>> Conway has in stage heater disease and a pump is keeping him alive, a VLAD, powered by special

  • batteries that conway keeps in a fanny pack. When he goes to sleep at night he plugs the

  • device spew the wall. Conway says after he first complained of shortness

  • of breath in 2005 doctors discovered he had he had a blocked artery so they put in an

  • extent. His heart problems continued and conway had

  • to have more extents put in. >>> But in 2008 one of those 10 extents had

  • two blood clots going to it, they blocked the major artery, I forget the technical name

  • but they call it the "widow maker" and it destroyed over 50% of my heart.

  • >>> After that conway grew weaker and weaker. >>> He couldn't walk up the stairs, he couldn't

  • leave the house, he couldn't go out and get our mail.

  • He was short of breath all the time and we couldn't do anything.

  • It was scary. The kids had asked me at one point, "are we

  • still going to have a dad?" And that was a hard thing to answer.

  • >>> Conway was put on the waiting list for a heart trance plant in 2010 as a stopgap

  • measure surgeons put in an LVAD. It wasn't that long ago that people had to

  • get a transplant or they would die but these days people can live for years with a heart

  • pump. >>> This tube goes into the heart and this

  • into the aorta, the blood vessel coming out on the other side of the heart and it pumps

  • blood through it. >>> Cardiac surgeon Walter Levinsky has trained

  • surgeons on how to Implant the device, and he has had patients who have lived for years

  • including one man who has had this pump for a decade.

  • >>> It is a proven fact that this is good for you if you have terminal heart failure

  • for your survival and quality of life it's good technology.

  • >>> But LVADs aren't perfect, they increase the risk of stroke and they're not appropriate

  • for every patient with advanced heart disease still they have become a viable option since

  • donated hearts are in short supply. The nonprofit group "life sharing" over sees

  • this in San Diego and imperial county, the director says it takes a special set of circumstances

  • for a person to become a heart donor. >>> The person has to die in the hospital

  • while their heart is still beating accident they have to be of a certain age and the family

  • has to consent for donation or they have to be on the registry to donate.

  • >>> Nationwide each year there are only about 2100 donated hearts, currently there are 30

  • San Diegans waiting for one, including Paul conway, he's been on the list for more than

  • two years. He has to stay within 2 hours driving distance

  • of Sharp Hospital at all times in case a heart becomes available.

  • In the meantime conway has learned to live with his LVAD and so have his daughters.

  • >>> It's kinda sad, but he can do most things like take us places, he still goes to Disneyland

  • with us and he can go on the roller coaster. >>> I guess it's cool because he's like a

  • robot. >>> Conway says he's hanging tough until he

  • gets his heart transplant. >>> I know it's here and it can be aggravating

  • but every time I look at it I say it's saved my life, three more Christmases, three more

  • new years, how can I complain about that? >> Kenny Goldberg, KPBS news.

>>> Paul conway works hard to stay in shape, takes walks around his neighborhood with his

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