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Hunter Shot by Cheney Has Minor Heart Attack
Hunter Shot by Cheney Has Minor Heart Attack
Vice President Dick Cheney walks on the third floor of the Senate side of Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2006. On Monday, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department issued a report that found the main factor contributing to Cheney's hunting accident was a "hunter's judgment factor." (AP PhHunter Shot by Cheney Has Minor Heart Attack
By Daniela Deane and William Branigin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, February 14, 2006; 3:36 PM
Hunter Shot by Cheney Has Minor Heart Attack
By Daniela Deane and William Branigin
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, February 14, 2006; 3:36 PM
The 78-year-old Texas lawyer who was shot by Vice President Cheney in a hunting accident suffered a "minor heart attack" this morning after a piece of birdshot moved and lodged in his heart, hospital officials said.
Doctors treating Harry Whittington said the Republican lawyer was moved back into the intensive care unit and will need to remain hospitalized for at least a week.
A statement issued later by Cheney's office said the vice president spoke to Whittington around 1:30 p.m., wishing him well and asking if he needed anything.
"The vice president said that he stood ready to assist," the statement said. "Mr. Whittington's spirits were good, but obviously his situation deserves the careful monitoring that his doctors are providing."
"Some of the birdshot appears to have moved and lodged into part of his heart," Peter Banko, an administrator and spokesman for Christus Spohn Memorial Hospital, told reporters outside the Corpus Christi hospital. Banko said the birdshot "caused him to have a minor heart attack."
Asked if the birdshot could move more and endanger Whittington's life, David Blanchard, emergency room chief at the hospital, said: "When birdshot is in your body, there's always the risk they can move. We'll watch very closely for any migration."
He said later, however, that the single BB-like piece of birdshot is "in a fixed position" and it not expected to travel. Blanchard said he and other doctors treating Whittington feel "very strongly that all the other birdshot in him is not problematic." The number of other pieces of birdshot in Whittington's body is not known, he said, but could range anywhere from "more than five" to "less than 150 to 200."
Blanchard described the incident this morning as an "atrial fibrillation," or quivering of the upper part of the heart, as a result of irritability or inflammation caused by the piece of birdshot. He also described it as a "silent or minor heart attack."
The turn of events, announced in a news briefing this afternoon, injected a more serious tone into reports of the accidental shooting, which had become the subject of jokes on late-night talk shows and the Internet. Even White House spokesman Scott McClellan made light of the shooting this morning when he joked to reporters about the orange tie he was wearing and said the reason the visiting University of Texas football team was wearing orange -- the school color -- on the South Lawn was "not because they are concerned that the vice president will be there."
In the only eyewitness account of Saturday's shooting to emerge so far, Katharine Armstrong, the owner of the ranch where it took place, described Whittington's injuries as minor. She said he was hit in the cheek, neck and chest by birdshot from a 28-guage shotgun when Cheney turned and fired at a quail, not realizing that Whittington was in his line of fire.
Armstrong, a prominent Texas Republican and strong supporter of President Bush, told reporters that the birdshot "broke the skin." She said the shotgun blast "knocked him silly. But he was fine. He was talking. His eyes were open. It didn't get in his eyes or anything like that."
Blanchard said what happened to Whittington was extremely rare. He said cardiologists may see a similar case only once or twice in their lifetimes.
Banko said cardiologists at the hospital were consulting with White House doctors because the doctors had first treated Whittington after Cheney accidentally shot him.
Blanchard said only one piece of birdshot was causing Whittington's heart problems at the moment. "This is the only one we are concerned about," he said.
He and Banko described the heart attack as "asymptomatic," meaning that Whittington did not display any symptoms of a heart attack.
"We picked up an irregular heartbeat,' Blanchard said. "At no time did he ever have any chest pain." He said the incident happened around 6:30 a.m.
"We knew he had some birdshot very close to the heart from the get-go," Blanchard said. However, "we're not 100 percent certain where it is," he added, explaining that doctors felt it was better to leave it alone than to operate to remove it at this point.
Blanchard said Whittington's coronary arteries are clear and that "he has the heart of a much, much younger individual."
According to the American Heart Association, atrial fibrillation affects about 2.2 million Americans. It happens when the heart's two small upper chambers quiver instead of beating effectively. As a result, blood can pool in the chambers and clot, potentially causing a stroke.
Cheney, 65, shot Whittington late Saturday afternoon at the exclusive 50,000-acre Armstrong Ranch near Corpus Christi during a hunting party with three other people.
Details emerged yesterday showing that the White House allowed Cheney to decide when and how to disclose details of the shooting to the local sheriff and the public the next morning.
Cheney has not commented personally on the shooting or acknowledged any error. Mary Matalin, a Cheney adviser, has said that Cheney "felt badly" about the incident, but she added that "he was not careless or incautious" and did not violate any hunting rules. "He didn't do anything he wasn't supposed to do," Matalin said.
Cheney watched part of the press conference outside the Corpus Christi hospital on television after being advised that doctors would brief the press "on complications in Mr. Whittington's condition," according to the statement issued by Cheney's office.
"The vice president said that his thoughts and prayers are with Mr. Whittington and his family," it said.
© 2006 The Washington Post Companyoto/Lauren Victoria Burke) (Lauren Victoria Burke - AP)
