

ZUMBA Fundraiser
Thanksgiving Eve ZUMBA®thon to benefit Let Hope Live®.
Thursday Nov 24th, @ 6PM at the Woodland Hill Montessori School
Come Shake, Shimmy, & Celebrate the Season of Giving with
Holly Rose - Zumba Instructor/Official Zumba Jammer
Cost: Any donation is greatly appreciated!
Profile in Courage: Holly Rose doesn't let a life of pain hold her back
By JENNIFER O'BRIEN, HealthyLife By all accounts, Holly Rose of East Greenbush has led a fairly charmed life. The former high school cheerleader married her high school sweetheart, the captain of the basketball team. She's the proud mother of four grown boys; pictures of their smiling faces line her living room. With blond hair, a toned physique and a face that belies her 50 years, Rose is an aerobics instructor who teaches 12 classes a week, a feat that becomes more impressive after learning she's battled a potentially debilitating condition most of her adult life. After the birth of her second son, Andrew, however, Rose noticed that the chronic pain in her knee she had learned to live with was now accompanied by a shortness of breath. Her heart felt as if it were racing all the time. She went to a cardiologist and was alarmed to learn she had an enlarged heart. They also did a bone scan of the knee area, a moment Rose remembers as one of the scariest in her life. "They showed me the X-ray," she says. "I saw my femur; it looked like Swiss cheese." Thinking that she had bone cancer, Rose cried the entire drive home. Because of the heart complications, she was soon hospitalized. While in the hospital, Rose was scheduled for an exploratory biopsy. A doctor's last minute decision to do an angiogram, though, likely saved her life. The angiogram, an X-ray exam that allows a doctor to see blood vessels and the flow of blood to the heart, revealed that the swollen knee area and shortness of breath were connected. Finally, at 22, Rose was diagnosed with an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). According to Dr. Gary Siskin, a vascular radiologist at Albany Medical Center, AVM causes arteries and veins to be abnormally connected. "It makes much more blood flow to a particular part of the body, because the arteries are demanding a lot of blood in that part of the body and the veins are much bigger than they should be as well," he says. Siskin says that while AVM is prevalent in the extremities, he has seen them everywhere from the pelvic area to the brain. |