NEW YORK, Feb. 11 2008
Putting Squeeze On Heart Disease
Cuffs Put Around Patient's Legs Push Blood Back Up To Heart As It Beats, To Treat Angina
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Dr. Debra Braverman on The Early Show Wednesday (CBS/EARLY SHOW)
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Video Heart 'Squeeze' Helps Patients Heart treatment expert Dr. Debra Braverman, tells Maggie Rodriguez how this simple technology helps heart disease patients improve blood flow and clear blockages.
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It's called "enhanced external counter-propulsion," or EECP, for short.
It involves wrapping blood pressure cuffs are put around the legs to push blood back up to the heart in time with a person’s heartbeat.
Doctors say it results in reduced pain and an improved quality of life for patients, without needles, surgery or hospital stays.
EECP expert Dr. Debra Braverman, of the Albert Einstein Healthcare Network in Philadelphia is on the forefront of this therapy.
As The Early Show continued it weeklong series "Early Keeps the Beat" Wednesday, Braverman said it EECP is gaining in popularity.
EECP is designed to treat angina, which Braverman explained is an umbrella term for symptoms of coronary artery disease, when the heart isn't receiving enough blood and so, not enough oxygen. Blood vessels that carry oxygen to the heart become narrowed or blocked. Angina may feel like chest pain or pressure, shortness of breathe, fatigue, or nausea. It's different for each patient.
Generally, she says, EECP involves 35 hours of treatment over a seven-week period.
EECP works, Braverman says, by improving blood vessel function. One study last year, and one coming out this March, found that EECP created new cells to line the blood vessels. It can heal the lining of the blood vessels. In pigs, we can see the blood vessels becoming normal. It's really "an astounding finding," Braverman told CBS News. "It works like a passive form of exercise. We're exercising your circulation for you. Patients love that!"
Many EECP patients have already had surgery such as stent implantation or bypass, and many take medications. EECP is for people who can't have more surgery, or don't want surgery and are still restricted by their heart disease. It's used in chronic, stable patients, not in emergencies. Many people want to delay surgery to see if this non-invasive therapy will work. It's not suited for people with a leaky aortic valve, blood clots in the legs, or blood pressure that's out of control.
EECP isn't a cure, Braverman pointed out, and it's not for everyone, but people do say they take less medicine with it, have more energy, and rely less on drugs such as nitroglycerin.
EECP isn't a once-in-a-lifetime treatment, she added. Heart disease is chronic, and symptoms can return.
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- THE EECP THERAPY FOR THE HEART SOUNDS WONDERFUL, ESPECIALLY FOR THOSE WHO REQUIRE LONGER RECUPERATION
PERIODS, GENERALLY THE SENIORS AND SPECIAL NEEDS.
I HOPE TO HEAR MORE ABOUT THIS AND WHERE AND WHEN IT''S AVAILABLE................ - Reply to this comment
- Unfortunately, as I said in my interview, Americans are traditionally focused on hi-tech solutions. However, as public awareness grows, more patients and more physicians are turning to EECP because it is a no-brainer. That is why I wrote my book "Heal Your Heart with EECP" (Celestial Arts 2005), to help spread the word about this remarkable treatment option that every heart disease sufferer deserves to know about.
Dr. Debra Braverman - Reply to this comment
- This therapy sounds like a real find. Its non invasive and improves life quality. As Dr Braverman says it is like passive exercise.
Why don''t we hear more about it? - Reply to this comment

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