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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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damage to a heart valve. <strong>The</strong> first step in <strong>Bush</strong>'s treatment was the attempt to slow the<br />

heart rate and to restore the normal rhythm. After an hour of tests, doctors gave <strong>Bush</strong><br />

digoxin, a drug used to restore the usual heart rhythm. When the digoxin proved unable<br />

to do the job alone, <strong>Bush</strong>'s physicians began to administer another heart medication,<br />

procainamide. Though doctors claimed that <strong>Bush</strong> showed "some indications of a positive<br />

response" to this therapy, <strong>Bush</strong>'s heart irregularity was resistant to the medicines and<br />

persisted through Sunday, May 5. Doctors also began to administer an anticoagultant<br />

drug, Coumadin, in addition to aspirin. <strong>Bush</strong> was thus being kept going with four<br />

different medications.<br />

At this point, <strong>Bush</strong>'s medical team was forced to contemplate resorting to<br />

electrocardioversion, a procedure in which an electric shock is administered to the heart,<br />

momentarily stopping the heart and resetting its rhythm. This prospect was enough to<br />

create a crisis of the entire regime, since electrocardioversion would have required <strong>Bush</strong><br />

to undergo general anesthesia, which in turn would have mandated the transfer of<br />

presidential powers to Vice President Dan Quayle. Back in 1985, we have seen that <strong>Bush</strong><br />

was the beneficiary of such a transfer when Reagan underwent surgery for colon cancer.<br />

<strong>The</strong> transfer would have been accomplished under Section III of the Twenty-Fifth<br />

Amendment of the Constitution, which states that<br />

Whenever the President transmits to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the<br />

Speaker of the House of Representatives his written declaration that he is unable to<br />

discharge the powers and duties of his office, and until he transmits to them a written<br />

declaration to the contrary, such powers and duties shall be discharged by the Vice<br />

President as Acting President.<br />

<strong>The</strong> specter of Acting President Dan Quayle brought forth a wave of public expressions<br />

of consternation and dismay. According to a Washington Post-ABC public opinion poll<br />

published May 7, 57% of those responding said that in their opinion Quayle was not<br />

qualified to take over as Acting President. In the night between Sunday May 5 and<br />

Monday May 6, <strong>Bush</strong> was still experiencing sporadic episodes of an irregular heartbeat.<br />

But on the morning of Monday, May 6 his doctors suddenly pronounced him fit to return<br />

to the Oval Office, where he was seated at his desk by 9:30 AM, and resumed what was<br />

described as his normal work schedule. <strong>The</strong> doctors conceded only that they had asked<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> to curtail his usual frenetic schedule of recreational sports.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> returned to work wired with a portable heart monitor. This was a device about the<br />

size of a telephone pager, with white wires leading to patches on his chest which<br />

measured the rate of his heartbeat. <strong>Bush</strong> stated that he was "Back to normal and the same<br />

old me." He declined to show off his heart monitor with the quip "Do you think I'm<br />

Lyndon Johnson?" LBJ had pulled up his shirt to show reporters a scar on his stomach<br />

after a gall bladder operation. [fn 30]<br />

On May 7, <strong>Bush</strong>'s chief attending physician, Dr. Burton Lee, gave a briefing at Bethesda<br />

in which he disclosed that <strong>Bush</strong>'s bout with atrial fibrillation had been caused by an<br />

overactive thyroid gland. Lee assured the press that the problem had been an overactive

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