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 A policeman stands
in front of the Milstein Building of the New York Presbyterian Hospital-Columbia
03 September, 2004, where former president Bill Clinton was admitted.
Clinton entered the hospital to undergo heart bypass surgery which doctors
urged be carried out as quickly as possible. (Xinhua/AFP PHOTO Mandel
NGAN)
Caption Members of
the press gather in front of the Milstein Hospital Building at New York Presbyterian
Hospital in New York, September 3, 2004. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton
was admitted to a New York hospital on Friday for heart bypass surgery, a
statement from his office said. The 58-year-old former president, a Democrat who
served two terms from 1993 to 2001, had gone to Northern Westchester Hospital
on Thursday afternoon after experiencing mild chest pain and shortness
of breath, his office said. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo Peter Morgan)
Caption Members of the
press gather in front of the Milstein Hospital Building at New York Presbyterian Hospital
in New York, September 3, 2004. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton was
admitted to a New York hospital on Friday for heart bypass surgery, a statement
from his office said. The 58-year-old former president, a Democrat who served
two terms from 1993 to 2001, had gone to Northern Westchester Hospital on
Thursday afternoon after experiencing mild chest pain and shortness of breath,
his office said. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo Peter Morgan)
 Photo dated on
June 22, 2004 shows Clinton is promoting his new book "My Life".(Xinhua/AFP
Photo)
Clinton is
playing saxophone at the celebration of Lionel Hampton's 90th birthday, July 23,
1998.(Xinhua/AFP File Photo)
NEW YORK, Sept. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Hours after deciding
to undergo heart bypass surgery, former US president Bill Clinton said he
considered himself "very lucky."
"My blockage is so substantial. I think if I don't do
this there's virtually a 100 percent chance I'll have a heart attack," he told
CNN's "Larry King Live" Friday evening.
Clinton will go under the knife at Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center early next week. But he seemed in good spirits as he
discussed his future.
"I feel really blessed, you know, a lot of people who
have a heart attack never get an advance warning."
Clinton was taken to Westchester Medical Center
Thursday evening for tests after complaining of chest pain and shortness of
breath.
An angiogram revealed Clinton has significant
blockages in several arteries - serious enough that angioplasty, a procedure
where a balloon is used to open up arteries, was ruled out.
Some media reports said Clinton would undergo
multiple bypass surgery and others said it would be a quadruple bypass.
"You know, some of this is genetic, and I may have
done some damage in those years when I was too careless about what I ate," he
said. "For whatever reason, I've got a problem and I've got a chance to deal
with it."
After the diagnosis, Clinton checked into Columbia
Presbyterian. He was supposed to have met his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton, at the
State Fair near Syracuse. Instead, his wife made an early exit to rush to his
side.
"You have heard by now, because it just hit the news,
he was admitted into Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in the last hour or so," she
announced to the upstate crowd.
Seeming at moments to struggle slightly to maintain
her composure, she tried to smile and to downplay the gravity of her husband's
condition.
"So I'm leaving here, and I know you understand," she
said. "And I'm sorry I'm not going to get a chance to see each of you
personally."
Meanwhile, the ex-President called family and
friends, including his father-in-law, Dick Kelley, in Hot Springs, Arkansas.
Experts said bypass surgery is serious but very common
and the otherwise healthy 58-year-old ex-President should make a complete
recovery.
But word of Clinton's heart troubles stunned
Democratic leaders and sent shock waves through the campaign of John Kerry, who
had been counting on the popular pol to stump for him. "I want you all to let
out a cheer and clap that President Clinton can hear all the way to New York,"
Kerry said at a rally in Newark, Ohio.
Fresh from his big speech at Madison Square Garden,
President Bush paused while campaigning in Wisconsin to send Clinton "our best
wishes for a swift and speedy recovery." Later, he called Clinton from Air Force
One to wish him well, the White House said.
Famous for his Big Mac addiction, Clinton had
recently lost a lot of weight, which he attributed to the low-carb South Beach
Diet and a strict jogging and workout regimen.
But in recent weeks, friends noticed that the usually
hale and hearty Clinton seemed run-down. Yet on Sunday, he managed to give a
rousing pro-Kerry speech at Riverside Church in upper Manhattan.
The Clintons had been scheduled to begin a two-day
upstate tour,but early Thursday he went instead to Westerchester Medical
Center for a more sensitive heart test, an angiogram.
The angiogram revealed the blockage but no heart
attack, said Dr. Anthony Pucillo who performed it. Enditem |