Life with a New Beat
If you're adjusting to life after a heart attack or are living with certain other heart diseases, ask your doctor for a referral to attend cardiac rehabilitation.
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At UF Health Central Florida, you have access to one of the most advanced heart and vascular programs in the state. From state-of-the-art heart catheterizations to minimally-invasive open heart surgery and everything in between, there’s no need to go anywhere else for advanced cardiovascular care.
Our cardiologists, interventional cardiologists and cardiovascular/thoracic surgical teams provide comprehensive care for a wide range of conditions.
To learn more about cardiac rehabilitation, call:
Cardiac rehabilitation completes the continuum of heart care, offering outpatient monitored exercise and educational programs designed to reduce risk factors for coronary artery disease.
Our programs are tailored to the personal interests, needs and abilities of each patient. Cardiac rehabilitation offers a safe and enjoyable way for people with heart disease or those who have had cardiac surgery to improve their cardiovascular fitness, function and knowledge.
If you're adjusting to life after a heart attack or are living with certain other heart diseases, ask your doctor for a referral to attend cardiac rehabilitation.
Today, cardiac rehab is an option for people of all ages and with many forms of heart disease. You may benefit from cardiac rehabilitation if your medical history includes:
Cardiac rehabilitation isn’t appropriate for everyone, though even if you have one of these conditions. Your health care team will work with your physician to thoroughly evaluate your health to make sure you’re ready to start a cardiac rehab program. You must have a referral from a doctor to attend cardiac rehabilitation.
If you have a heart attack or cardiac arrest, you’ll want to be cared for by the most highly trained team. As an Accredited Chest Pain Center with Primary PCI & Resuscitation, our hospitals provide the most advanced and timely care to patients who’ve had heart emergencies.
Accredited Chest Pain Center with Primary PCI and Resuscitation is the American College of Cardiology (ACC)’s highest level of accreditation for chest pain centers.
The ACC awarded UF Health Leesburg Hospital and UF Health Spanish Plaines Hospital with this designation after rigorous onsite evaluations of our teams’ abilities to evaluate, diagnose and treat patients experiencing a heart attack or cardiac arrest. The accreditation is also thanks to crucial collaboration between UF Health Central Florida and emergency medical services.
Our “Primary PCI” designation tells patients:
Our “Resuscitation” designation means we use a therapy called therapeutic hypothermia (or cooling) for eligible patients who’ve had a cardiac arrest.
When you go into cardiac arrest, your heart stops, also stopping blood and oxygen from flowing to your brain. Without oxygen, your brain cells begin to die. Cooling buys your brain time. By temporarily lowering your body temperature after cardiac arrest, we can help reduce inflammation and decrease swelling in your brain, in turn reducing the risk of brain damage.
One in four heart attacks are severe enough to require PCI to open clogged arteries and restore blood flow to the heart. Meanwhile, more than 350,000 cardiac arrests happen outside of the hospital each year, 90 percent of which result in death.
Timing is everything when it comes to your heart. Knowing which hospital is best equipped to care for you if the unthinkable happens could quite possibly save your life.
With a heart attack, time is muscle. Knowing the signs and symptoms is essential to getting help quickly. Visit the pages below for tips on identifying heart attacks, your risk for developing heart disease, and tips for living a heart-healthier life.
Did you know heart attacks have beginnings™?
Like other diseases, heart attacks have early sign and symptoms. These “beginnings” occur in over 50 percent of patients. However, if recognized in time, these “beginnings” can be treated before the heart is damaged. 85 percent of heart damage occurs within the first two hours of a heart attack. Early Heart Attack Care, or EHAC, is knowing the subtle danger signs of a heart attack and acting upon them immediately—BEFORE HEART DAMAGE OCCURS.
Learn the early signs and symptoms
What is the difference (men vs. women)?
What are the atypical presentations?
In an atypical presentation, the signs and symptoms are different. How? The patient may not complain about pain or pressure in the chest.
Be alert for the following:
What are the risk factors?
How can you prevent a heart attack?
* Information provided by the American College of Cardiology (ACC). Early Heart Attack Care™, and EHAC® are trademarks of the ACC.
Electrophysiology, or EP, is a cardiac specialty that deals with the management of the electrical activity of the heart and heart rhythms such as atrial fibrillation, PVCs, and SVT (heart beating too fast).
Our EP program at UF Health Central Florida is one of the busiest in the southeast, performing over one thousand procedures every year. Equipped with the latest state-of-the-art technology and specialized equipment, our electrophysiology experts offer a wide range of procedures that diagnose and treat heart problems. We are able to map the area of the heart that is causing the abnormal beats and use a process called ablation to treat the area and make it less prone to cause abnormal rhythms.
EP physicians also implant cardiac devices such as pacemakers, defibrillators and biventricular pacemakers.
Each member of our care team specializes in treating atrial fibrillation and other cardiac arrhythmias. Our multidisciplinary approach to care combined with high-volume experience allows us to develop a safe and effective treatment plan and to monitor your progress and response to treatment.
Our cardiologists and cardiac care professionals perform thousands of life-saving procedures each year through interventional and non-invasive techniques. We offer a full range of cardiac catheterization and interventional procedures, such as angioplasties, percutaneous coronary intervention and stents (including drug-eluting stents). Our team also implants devices and performs peripheral interventions.
Interventional procedures can be performed during a diagnostic cardiac catheterization (cath) if a blockage is identified or may be scheduled as a follow-up to a cardiac cath during which the interventional cardiologist diagnosed the presence of coronary artery disease.
Like diagnostic cardiac caths, interventional procedures are performed by threading a long, slender, flexible catheter through arteries in the groin, wrist or other location to the exact spot in the heart where the narrowing or blockage has occurred. Fluoroscopy is used by the interventional cardiologist performing the procedure to guide the catheter to the location of the blockage. Once the catheter is in place, interventional procedures such as balloon angioplasty, stent placement, rotablation or others can be performed.
The positive results of our interventional cardiology program have led to improved heart health for thousands of patients throughout the region.
Every year, thousands of people from The Villages and the surrounding region are brought to the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at UF Health Spanish Plaines Hospital for lifesaving, minimally invasive cardiac stenting and diagnosis.
Bill Blair was one of those people. While participating in the 64-mile route of the Hearts for Our Hospital Bicycle Challenge, he unexpectedly collapsed on the side of the road. Brian Saluck, a cardiologist, happened to be driving by and stopped to help. Dr. Saluck initiated CPR, and within minutes, emergency responders were at the scene. Bill was taken by ambulance to the emergency department, and Dr. Saluck rushed to the Cardiac Cath Lab to perform the lifesaving procedure.
“It has always been a passion of mine to stay fit and in shape, so this was a huge surprise to me,” Bill said. “The stars aligned for me — I was in exactly the right place when this happened to me. To have Dr. Saluck there saved my life!”
Bill is quick to note that until that fateful day when he needed it, he didn’t know about the high-quality care offered at UF Health Spanish Plaines Hospital and how vital it is. It is important to him that everyone understands the critical role a cath lab plays in saving the lives of people in our communities every day.
UF Health Spanish Plaines Hospital Auxiliary Foundation is raising funds for a $1.4 million heart & vascular center on the hospital’s second floor so that experts can continue to provide world-class cardiac care in a modern, state-of-the-art setting. Watch Bill’s story and be sure to visit our Foundation page to learn more!