Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 12 | Page 30

REVIEW Heart - A History Sandeep Jauhar, MD Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, New York 2018 Reviewed by M. Saleem Seyal, MD, FACC, FACP “The heart has its reasons of which reason knows nothing.” - Blaise Pascal (1623-1662- a French mathematician, writer and Catholic theologian) “(The heart is) the beginning of life, the Sun of the microcosm, as proportionably the Sun deserves to be called the heart of the world…. In sum, its functions made the heart supreme in the organism, for “by nourishing, cherishing and vegetating, (the heart is) the foundation of life, the author of all.” - In De Motu Cordis 1628 D r. Sandeep Jauhar is a cardiolo- gist who serves as director of the Heart Failure Program at Long Island Jewish Medical Center. He regularly wrote op-ed piec- es for the New York Times and is a bestsell- ing author of two previous books, Intern: A Doctor’s Initiation (2009) and Doctored: The Disillusionment of an American Physician (2014). Heart - A History is his third and most ambitious book thus far that deals with the organ that makes us tick. In the prologue, Dr. Jauhar describes his personal symptoms of exertional dyspnea at age 45. A CT scan of the chest showed coronary artery calcium (CAC), and he underwent cardiac CT angiography which showed non-obstructive coronary artery disease that did not 28 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE require catheter-based intervention, but the diagnosis of coronary artery disease was established. He then narrates how his grandfather at age 57 had a sudden death, most likely secondary to an acute myocardial infarction. His older brother, Rajiv, is an interventional cardiologist. Dr. Jauhar is a trained physicist earning his PhD but changed his academic track to medicine and became a cardiologist. The Heart, a spontaneously moving, beating and shuddering meaty mass, has fascinated humans since time immemorial and was considered to be an inscrutable and mysterious organ that was the seat of the soul. The heart emanates emotional heat and is untouchable. The intrigue about the heart has been expressed in emotional, spiritual, poetic and literary dimensions by countless physicians, sages and philosophers over the centuries. In the car- diocentric sense, the heart has enjoyed a profoundly exalted status and has been put on the pedestal with deep meanings and amazing