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Darlene Leach Miller

Passed away on January 10, 2024 at 92 yrs old. Born December 2, 1931 in West Concord MN to Mamie (Raleigh) and Louis Leach. She and her 3 sisters were raised on a farm and she graduated from West Concord HS in 1949. Darlene then worked in Minneapolis for Dayton’s and Maytag before returning to West Concord where she married and had 4 children with Darrell Miller. They later divorced, tasking her with raising and putting the children through college alone. She worked for the US Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service of Dodge County for 10 years. She then worked for the Mayo Clinic for over 20 years where she was part of the inaugural Pacemaker Clinic prior to retiring. Raising her children and attending their many activities was Darlene’s primary focus. At one point, she attended her youngest son’s HS football game Friday night, her middle son’s at Hamline University Saturday afternoon and her eldest son’s at Mankato State on Saturday night. She was also active in ....

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Clemenceau Medical Center's Electrophysiology clinic performs rare and risky procedure

It was a case no one else was ready to take on – a heart condition so rare that even the Mayo Clinic has recorded just 30 cases in the past 20 years – and a patient with a history of going into cardiac arrest during surgical procedures. But for Dr Khaled Awad, Electrophysiologist and Interventional Cardiologist at Clemenceau Medical Center Hospital (CMC Hospital), it was a chance to give a woman her life back.
“Everybody was telling her, ‘we can’t do it’, but she was really suffering,” says Dr Awad. “For years, even with high dosages of anti-arrhythmia drugs, she would have a heart rate going up to 180 for many hours, every couple of days.” For people with her condition, this was potentially life-threatening, he says, because it could trigger sudden cardiac death.
[Dr Awad’s head shot goes here with the pull quote]
Born with dextro-transposition – a rare congenital heart defect where the position of the pulmonary artery and aorta are swapped – and the ....

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Swampscott doc donates antique pacemakers Salem Hospital


North Shore Medical Center to dislay
Linda Werbner
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“Ginormous” is the word cardiologist Dr. Lawrence Block used to describe the bulky, near-hockey puck sized pacemakers of the early 1960s that came with batteries. Compared to today’s tiny pill-size devices, his description says a lot about the speed of technology.
“Over the last three decades there have been tremendous improvements,” said Block. “They’ve gotten smaller and smaller and smarter and smarter.”
These life-saving devices stabilize heart rhythms by applying electrical impulses to the heart. 
Initially, the pacemaker had a single wire which went through a vein into the right ventricle,” he said. “By 1990, two-wire systems were developed enabling coordination of the upper and lower chambers and improving the heart’s pumping function. And today the batteries last up to 10 years or more.” ....

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