The Saturday before Thanksgiving, Randy Woolley was doing what he always does at the start of the holiday season: making candy for his family鈥檚 candy company.
鈥淚 was making a batch of butter toffee, and I started to have what felt like bad indigestion,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淚 took Tums and Pepto Bismol and nothing seemed to help.鈥
Woolley had radiating pain in his chest that traveled up to his neck and lower jaw. He broke out in a cold sweat. Woolley鈥檚 wife Angie was concerned, so she texted a neighbor who happens to be an ER nurse.
鈥淎s soon as our neighbor heard my symptoms, she told Angie that we needed to go to the ER immediately,鈥 said Woolley.
Woolley was having a heart attack.
鈥淚 was conscious the whole time,鈥 he said.
Woolley lives in Herriman, about five minutes away from the 91麻豆天美直播 Center in Daybreak.
鈥淲e drove over to the health center, walked into the ER and I told them I was pretty sure I was having a heart attack,鈥 said Woolley.
After hearing his symptoms and confirming the heart attack with an EKG, the reality of the situation started to hit Woolley and his wife.
鈥淲e walked into this room and there were about twelve people waiting to start working on me,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淭hey had me lay down and told me they were going to take care of me.鈥
The care team began to prep Woolley for life flight. Although Woolley didn鈥檛 know it at the time, the care team started a timer for fifteen minutes. Their goal? To get Woolley prepped and on the helicopter before the timer went off.
Woolley rode to the University of Utah Hospital via helicopter 鈥 an eight-minute journey from the U of U Health Center in Daybreak. Another large care team was ready and waiting to operate on Woolley when the helicopter arrived.
鈥淭hey got me out of the helicopter and wheeled me down the sidewalk and into the hospital through a couple of double doors into the operating room,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淭hey said they didn鈥檛 have a lot of time to explain what they were going to do, but that they were going to go in and find the blockage in my heart and fix it.鈥
From the time Woolley walked into the ER at the U of U Health Center in Daybreak, to the time the operation started, less than thirty minutes had passed.
鈥淚t was incredible,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淏oth for my wife, Angie, getting me to the ER less than thirty minutes after I started having symptoms, and to the medical staff getting me from Herriman clear over to the U of U Hospital operating room less than thirty minutes later.鈥
The medical team began operating and quickly found a blockage in his left anterior descending (LAD) artery. The LAD is the largest artery in the heart. It sends oxygen rich blood to the left ventricle of the heart. Woolley鈥檚 LAD was 99% blocked.
鈥淚t was a massive heart attack,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淭hey refer to this kind of heart attack as the widow maker.鈥
Woolley had three stints put in, and the 99% blockage cleared completely.
鈥淚t was incredible,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淏ecause everyone was on their A game, they were able to get me out of that terrible situation.鈥
After surgery Woolley recovered in the intensive care unit (ICU).
鈥淭hey started me on some medication and monitored me and my symptoms very closely,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 started to experience more chest pain that night, so my nurse and doctor found a medication to keep things under control.鈥
The day after his heart attack, Woolley was feeling well enough to meet with the physical therapy team to establish a new baseline, post-surgery.
鈥淚 walked down the hallway, and then up two flights of stairs with zero problems whatsoever,鈥 he said.
A cardiogram determined that Woolley鈥檚 heart attack had caused him to lose about thirty percent of his heart鈥檚 pumping capacity.
鈥淭hey said it was pretty remarkable considering the kind of heart attack I had,鈥 said Woolley. 鈥淭hey credited it to everyone acting quickly.鈥
Woolley鈥檚 prognosis was really good. His heart was expected to fully recover within nine months to a year after his heart attack.
After spending one day in the ICU, Woolley transferred to a general care unit. Just two days later he was released from the hospital. The timing meant Woolley could be home with his family for Thanksgiving.
鈥淚鈥檓 so thankful for everything the care team did for me,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 was released from the hospital on Tuesday and was cooking a turkey for my family on Thursday.鈥
Woolley started physical therapy in the middle of December and made great progress from the start.
鈥淛ust one month into physical therapy, I had already regained fifteen percent of the 30 percent heart function I lost in the heart attack,鈥 he said.
As scary as the experience has been, Woolley said it has given him a new life.
鈥淚t was a really scary day for me and my family,鈥 he said. 鈥淔ortunately, everybody at the University of Utah was on their A game that day.鈥
Woolley is looking forward to continuing his seasonal candy making business, attending U of U football games, and celebrating holidays with his family.
鈥淚鈥檓 glad to be here, to celebrate another Thanksgiving, another Christmas, and another New Year,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd for many more years to come, of course.鈥