By
Elizabeth Richards
Shelly
Afthim is a wife, mother, community volunteer, and heart failure patient. Her story is one all women should hear.
Heart
disease causes one in three deaths in women each year. Forty-five percent of
women over the age of 20 have some kind of cardiovascular disease. More women die from heart disease than from
all types of cancer combined. These are startling statistics that Afthim didn’t
know before her journey with heart failure began.
|
Shelly Afthim |
In
2006, Afthim thought she had a bad case of bronchitis. She had a cough that
wouldn’t go away, extreme fatigue, and shortness of breath. One night, as she
fell asleep, she startled awake and found herself gasping for air.
She
drove herself to the hospital, something she has since learned you should never
do when having trouble breathing or heart-related symptoms. Once there, she had
a chest x-ray and they found something she’d never expected: she had congestive
heart failure. She was 35 years old.
“You
would have never thought that it was my heart,” she said. There was no known family
history of heart disease, although several years later her older sister died in
her sleep at the age of 50 from cardiomyopathy.
After
about a week in the hospital, Afthim was sent home, with a visiting nurse checking
in on her every other day. She’d been home less than two weeks when her blood
pressure, pulse and oxygen levels were so low the nurse called the doctor, who
told her she had to immediately get to the hospital. The numbers were so low, her doctor said,
that she was at risk of sudden death or stroke.
Afthim
went to Mercy Hospital, but they couldn’t do what she needed, so they planned
to transfer her to Maine Medical Center. As she waited to be transferred, a
nurse practitioner discovered that the blood work from her first visit had
showed a positive test for Lyme disease.
She was put on an antibiotic to treat the Lyme disease, which is assumed
to be the cause of her heart problems. After being treated at Mercy for a week,
she was transferred to Maine Medical Center where a defibrillator was
implanted.
After
that, Afthim said, she thought life would be back to normal. “I kind of looked
at it like my security blanket, like ‘I have this defibrillator, my heart’s
going to be okay’,” she said. But the Lyme disease became a chronic condition
that caused other problems such as pain throughout her body and severe memory
issues that impacted her job.
At
the same time, Afthim received more bad news: her defibrillator had been
recalled. Since removing it required a risky
surgery, the unit was reprogrammed to send a warning signal if it was, indeed,
defective. A year later, that alarm
sounded.
Afthim
went to Brigham and Women’s hospital, where the surgeons had more experience
with that type of surgery, and the defibrillator was removed and replaced. Once
again, she thought all was well.
Unfortunately,
her difficulties weren’t over yet. After beginning a new medication to help
with her Lyme disease, an interaction with her heart caused enough irregular
heartbeats that she needed a heart ablation.
Finally,
Afthim started to recover. She began volunteering for the American Heart
Association, was the Heart Walk Survivor Story in 2007, and in 2016 she was one
of the spokeswomen for Go Red for Women.
She then decided to go back to work, taking a position at the American
Heart Association.
Within
six to eight months of returning to work, she began having symptoms again. Her
ejection fraction, which describes the amount of blood pumped back into your
system with each beat, was below 15%. The
typical ejection fraction for a healthy heart is 60-70%. In 2006, Afthim’s had been 18%, and she’d
brought it back to 40% by the time she returned to work. “Now, I had made it even worse,” she said. “Instead
of focusing on my health, I decided to focus on a job again and that wasn’t the
right thing for me to do.”
Her
doctors began discussing a heart transplant, but she asked for time to improve
the numbers on her own. With the help of
a new prescription that wasn’t available before, her heart has rebounded to 40%
again. “I’ve learned to accept my
limitations now,” Afthim said. She says
she has a great support network, including friends in the community as well as
other survivors. She volunteers for the
American Heart Association, Windham Boosters, and other community outreach
efforts, and has hobbies that keep her busy.
“I just try to balance my life now and realize that having a job doesn’t
define who you are as a person,” she said. “Taking care of myself and being
here for my kids is the biggest thing for me.”
Afthim
has been asked to be the keynote survivor speaker at the Go Red for Women
luncheon in Portland on March 19th, to share her story and help
people understand that heart disease doesn’t always mean a heart attack or
stroke. “Sometimes there are things like heart failure that is just something
that people have to live with,” she said. The luncheon is an annual event that
often has 600 people in attendance, with speakers and breakout sessions to
learn about heart disease.
For
women, it’s important to know the signs and symptoms, which may be different
than symptoms in men, Afthim said. Often
women are too busy taking care of others to recognize the signs, she added.
Although
she lives with two chronic conditions, neither is obvious from the
outside. “I think It’s really important
to have people that you trust, and people who support you through it because
you don’t look sick,” Afthim said. “People
see me, and they think I’m fine, but they don’t understand that if I was having
a bad day, you wouldn’t see me at all. I’d be staying at home and I wouldn’t be
out in public.”
“I
really feel like we need to do a better job, especially with women, to make
sure that they do know that their greatest health threat is their heart,”
Afthim said. Although women find it difficult to take time for themselves, she
said, there are things they can do in their daily lives to prevent heart
disease, including not smoking, eating right, and knowing important numbers
like blood pressure and cholesterol levels. “There are things that you can do
yourself to lower your risks,” she said.
Although
Afthim is no longer the director of the Southern Maine Heart Walk, she’ll be walking
with a team of family and friends on May 17, 2020. On her fundraising page, she wrote “I walk because I
know that with every step, I’m making a difference in someone’s life. I know
that I am alive today because someone walked for me, so that I could survive.”
Donations to the team
can be made through the website www2.heart.org by clicking the Heart Walk page
and searching Afthim’s name.