“i’m very lucky that he has a very special interest in cardiology,” she says, adding that the assessment led to an electrocardiogram test to detect any cardiac conditions and a 24-hour heart monitor. “the results from the halter monitor showed that my heart rate did not go below 150 in that 24-hour period. i was running a marathon.”
no one’s heart should beat this fast consistently.
jenny went through more tests at the hospital that revealed her heart was enlarged, and two of her valves were leaking. “once it turned to my heart, i do remember being really scared but also being 23 and not understanding what was happening.”
diagnosed with heart failure
then she had severe chest pains and heart palpitations caused by a pulmonary embolism, a blood clot in her lung. she was later diagnosed with end-stage heart failure and prescribed blood thinners that she still takes today.
her symptoms were misdiagnosed as a non-functioning gallbladder, followed by covid for shortness of breath and asthma, delaying a critical diagnosis and reinforcing a dangerous myth: heart failure is not just an “older person’s disease.”
she’s lucky she survived.
jenny is advocating for earlier detection, treatment and prevention for heart failure awareness week, may 3 to 9, with the canadian heart failure society, which issued a
joint call to action with the canadian cardiovascular society to support young canadians living with heart failure. the call to action noted that hospitalizations for heart failure among adults aged 20 to 39 are rising, by up to 55 per cent, as
the canadian journal of cardiology reported in 2020. and statistics from 2023-24 reveal more than 5,000 canadians aged 40 to 49 were newly diagnosed.