NOTE TO READERS: Mayra Rodriguez passed away on Feb. 16, 2024. Abbott is grateful to have helped her live her vibrant life. We’re proud to share that she lived more than 15 years after she received her HeartMate II Left Ventricular Assist Device and inspired so many with her health journey. We’ll never forget her.
There's a tendency to talk about heart failure in terms of what you lose. It's one of the reasons finding support for heart failure can be a difficult process.
Not so for Mayra Rodriguez and Laura Huber. In living with heart failure for more than 15 years each, they always come back to what they’ve gained.
Sisterhood.
Both have a HeartMate II Left Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD), a heart pump that helps the left ventricle of the heart do its all-important job of sending blood to every part of the body with each beat. It is the predecessor of the HeartMate 3 LVAD, which initially was FDA-approved in 2017.
Though they live 1,500 miles apart, they affectionately call themselves "The LVAD Sisters," a nickname they adopted after meeting during the 2015 Heart Failure Society of America Annual Scientific Meeting near Washington, D.C.
How did they manage to form a bond so strong, so special, so quickly?
Well, both Rodriguez and Huber know what it's like to be told you only have hours to live — and yet, more than a decade and a half later, wake up each day ready for whatever life brings.
"It just clicked as soon as we met each other," Huber said. "It's almost like we already knew each other. Mayra definitely felt like a true heart sister, a heart warrior."
In May, both will celebrate another milestone year: Huber will mark 16 years since her HeartMate II was implanted, and it will be 15 years for Rodriguez.
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