January 28, 2012

New type of pacemaker implanted in Clarinda man

pacemaker A minister from southwest Iowa is among the first in the world to receive a newly-configured type of pacemaker during a recent operation at an Omaha hospital.

The device is called an I-C-D, for implantable cardioverter defibrillator. Dr. John Scherschel, a cardiologist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, says it was a thrill to be working with the developing technology.

“The devices are a little bit smaller than a deck of cards,” Dr. Scherschel says. “We think of them as slightly larger than a Zippo lighter.” The surgery was performed July 30th on Eddie Fidler, a 75-year-old from Clarinda. He is pastor of the Church of God in Clarinda. Scherschel says the newly-built device minimizes the number of connections between cardiac leads and the I-C-D.

Scherschel says, “We use three connections with four set screws to connect to four conductors through a single lead and the new technology is to use a single set screw and a single pin to hold all of these connectors together.” He says this is a “significant breakthrough” in the field.

“All of these connections are inside the body so if any of the connections are bad or fail, that means another surgical procedure to go back in and correct whatever is wrong,” Scherschel says. “The simpler those connections are, the more redundancy in the system, and the less extra material, the less likely those complications are to arise.”

The device is similar to a pacemaker, but with a key difference. Pacemakers are usually chosen to correct a heart rhythm that’s too slow, while I-C-Ds are used to correct a heart rhythm that’s too fast. As for the patient, Pastor Fidler, Scherschel says he recovered quickly.

“He is doing quite well,” Scherschel says. “He saw one of my partners in follow-up and he was getting back to his normal activities a week after the procedure and just had a couple of days of down time, of feeling kinda’ sore.” The new type of I-C-D connector system is called S-J-4. It was approved by the F.D.A. in April and first implanted in a patient in June.

It’s only been available for use at a limited number of medical centers nationwide. Once the device is in place, it runs on batteries for up to seven years. The batteries don’t conk out unexpectedly, as physicians can detect when the battery is running low during a routine office visit. 

Climatologist says heavy rains are unusual

Residents of eastern Iowa are cleaning up after heavy rains over the past two days. State Climatologist Harry Hillaker says it’s not unusual for Iowa to have heavy rainstorms in late August, but the storms this week were unique.

“When you usually think of really big summer time rainstorms, they’re more of the very intense, short lived variety, but this has been more of a long lasting type,” Hillaker said. Perhaps the hardest hit area was Monticello in Jones County, where officials say at least 200 homes and more than a dozen businesses were affected by Thursday’s flash floods.

While parts of eastern Iowa are waterlogged, other parts of the state remain drier than usual. “Especially the extreme northwest corner of the state, the Rock Rapids area and also from about Storm Lake eastward to Humboldt, Algona, Emmetsburg, Clarion…those areas are also a bit on the dry side,” Hillaker said. “Even some far northeast counties are a little drier than usual as well.”

Some areas of northwest Iowa are 5 to 6 inches below the normal amount of rainfall for this time of year. “What’s kind of been the saving grace, why it really hasn’t caused any major problems, is all this cool weather we’ve had. It’s greatly reduced how much moisture the crops need to progress,” Hillaker said.

Eastern Iowa should get a chance to dry out. Hillaker says cooler and drier weather is in store for the weekend and next week.

Monticello hit hard by flash flooding

The Jones County town of Monticello may have been hit harder than any area in Thursday’s flash flooding across eastern Iowa. Highway 151 between Monticello and Anamos was blocked by rushing waters and city administrator Doug Herman says hundreds of homeowners have wet basements.

“I bet we have at least 200 to 250 homes that had water coming up through basement floor drains, through basement bathrooms, some through windows,” Herman said. More than a dozen businesses in town were also damaged.

“A number of businesses that have been flooded a number of other times unfortunately,” Herman said. “Our last big flood event in ’02…they actually took on more water this time.” Road crews are repairing highway and street damage in the Monticello area today caused by gushing flash flood waters.

Many eastern Iowa communities are reporting rain accumulations this week between 5 and 10 inches. Shellsburg, located west of Cedar Rapids, received nearly 13 inches of rain

New type of pacemaker implanted in Clarinda man

PacemakerA minister from southwest Iowa is among the first in the world to receive a newly-configured type of pacemaker during a recent operation at an Omaha hospital.

The device is called an I-C-D, for implantable cardioverter defibrillator. Dr. John Scherschel, a cardiologist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, says it was a thrill to be working with the developing technology.

“The devices are a little bit smaller than a deck of cards,” Dr. Scherschel says. “We think of them as slightly larger than a Zippo lighter.” The surgery was performed July 30th on Eddie Fidler, a 75-year-old from Clarinda. He is pastor of the Church of God in Clarinda. Scherschel says the newly-built device minimizes the number of connections between cardiac leads and the I-C-D. [Read more...]

Supreme Court orders new trial in maternity case

The Iowa Supreme Court says a Linn County woman who was fired after returning to work from maternity leave should get a new trial. Elizabeth DeBoom worked as marketing director for a company called Raining Rose when she was fired in 2004 eight days after returning to full-time work from maternity leave.

Officials with the company told her she hadn’t caught up enough after returning to work. DeBoom filed suit saying the company fired her because of her sex and pregnancy. The company said DeBoom was not protected because she wasn’t pregnant when she was fired, and that she did not present enough evidence to show her firing was based on discrimination.

A jury ruled in favor of the company, but DeBoom appealed based on the jury instructions that she says prejudiced her claim of discrimination. The Iowa Supreme Court ruled the jury instruction provided by the district court required DeBoom to prove her sex or pregnancy was a “determining” factor in her termination and made it tougher to prove. Download PDF

The high court said that although Iowa has yet to determined whether the prohibition against firing someone “disabled by pregnancy” includes women who have recently given birth or taken maternity leave — the federal courts have interpreted that it does. So the court ordered that DeBloom be given a new trial.

Mason City man found guilty of murder

It took a jury about two hours Thursday to find a north-central Iowa man guilty of first-degree murder and first-degree robbery in the death of a man last August. A Hardin County Jury has found 18-year-old Damion Seats of Mason City guilty of first-degree murder and first-degree robbery.

Seats was accused of shooting Isidoro Erreguin five times at Erreguin’s home on Mason City’s north side last August. Seats was one of three people charged in the murder. Andre Wells Junior is scheduled to have his trial start on December 1st.

Jamie McFarland, who testified for the prosecution in the Seats trial that he drove Seats and Wells away from the crime scene, is expected to enter into a plea agreement with prosecutors to have the first-degree murder charge dropped. When sentenced at a later date,

Seats faces the mandatory sentence of life in prison without the opportunity for parole.

Story by Bob Fisher, KRIB, Mason City

Coon Rapids remembers Khruschev visit

Khrushchev_GarstNikita Krushchev visits the Garst farm.Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev never could have envisioned the impact his visit to Roswell Garst’s Iowa farm 50 years ago had — and is still having.

The town of Coon Rapids is holding a host of activities through the weekend, including a Khrushchev-Garst look-alike contest. Rachel Garst, Roswell’s granddaughter, is helping organize it all.

“We’re going to have a ceremony at the Garst farm which was just placed on the National Register of Historic Places,” Garst says. “In the afternoon, we’re going to have an agricultural progress parade.” Garst doesn’t remember any of the original visit as she was only one-year-old at the time, but visitors to the west-central Iowa community on Saturday will be treated to something of a repeat, in addition to seeing all sorts of agricultural advancements. [Read more...]