Ben's funeral to be carried online KXAN 36 Austin Thu, 29 Dec 2011 10:03 AM PST Family, friends and thousands of Ben Breedlove's online followers around the world will be able to watch the teenagers funeral Thursday afternoon. The 18-year-old died on Christmas Day after battling a lifelong heart disease. | Teen's Farewell Video Fox News Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:58 AM PST On Christmas night, a vibrant 18-year-old, Ben Breedlove, died from complications of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a hereditary heart disease that often manifests in childhood. | Summary Box: J&J seeks another OK for clot drug San Francisco Chronicle Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:57 AM PST (12-29) 09:23 PST , (AP) -- NEW USE?: Johnson & Johnson is seeking U.S. approval to market its new anticlotting pill, Xarelto, for patients with acute coronary syndrome, in which reduced blood flow to the heart muscle... | The heart of a woman: What doctors donât diagnose WFTV 9 Orlando Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:44 AM PST WHAT IS HEART DISEASE? The term heart disease is used to describe a variety of diseases that can affect the heart including: diseases of blood vessels, such as coronary artery disease, heart rhythm problems, heart infections and heart defects a person is born with. Furthermore, the term heart disease is also used interchangeably with the term cardiovascular disease which refers to conditions ... | UI Study: Heart attack can lead to heart rupture Mt. Pleasant News Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:38 AM PST For people who initially survive a heart attack, a significant cause of death in the next few days is cardiac rupture -- literally, bursting of the heart wall. A new study by University of Iowa researchers pinpoints a single protein as the key player in the biochemical cascade that leads to cardiac rupture. The findings, published Nov. 13 as an Advance Online Publication (AOP) of the journal ... | Top News Headlines New Jersey Herald Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:32 AM PST NEW USE?: Johnson & Johnson is seeking U.S. approval to market its new anticlotting pill, Xarelto, for patients with acute coronary syndrome, in which reduced blood flow to the heart muscle causes unstable chest pain or a heart attack. | A Tour Inside Syria's Insurgency The Atlantic Thu, 29 Dec 2011 09:12 AM PST Smuggled by anti-regime fighters across the Lebanon border and into the heart of the uprising, I found fearless protesters, calls for intervention, and the growing threat of civil war | | |
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