01/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/17/2025 12:05
David M. Booher, who writes for TV and film and has created original comics, including the fantasy series Canto, found himself in a surreal reality last week. Just a day after his Altadena home was destroyed in the Eaton fire, Booher underwent heart surgery at Cedars-Sinai to address a serious condition.
"Rather than have this hanging over us while thinking of rebuilding, I decided I wanted to be operating at an optimum physical level," Booher, 45, said. "My husband and I looked at each other and said, 'This is tragic, but it doesn't change the immediate plan. We'll move on to the next step.'"
Booher and husband, Steve, along with their three greyhounds, evacuated their home on Jan. 7. He didn't have time to pack the collection of comic books he has written. The next day, they learned the house was gone. By Jan. 9, Booher was at the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinaifor surgery to repair one of his heart's valves.
A few months prior, Booher had been diagnosed with mitral valve regurgitation, a condition in which the heart's mitral valve doesn't close as it should. Mitral valve regurgitation can cause heart failure, strokes and even sudden death, but it often goes unnoticed because symptoms are subtle. Booher's fatigue, which he chalked up to his active lifestyle, was one such overlooked sign.
Joanna Chikwe, MD, chair of the Department of Cardiac Surgery at Cedars-Sinai, spent last Wednesday reassuring patients who were watching the Sunset fire from the hospital's windows that they were in the safest place to be.
"I called patients already scheduled to have open-heart surgery to see what they wanted," she said. "When I saw David's address I thought, 'He'll never want to proceed. He must be overwhelmed.' But I was astonished and inspired by his resolve. He told me, 'Let's fix my heart so I can rebuild my life.'"
Chikwe repaired the faulty heart valve through a tiny incision with the help of a robot, and Booher, recuperating at a friend's home a few days later, already feels transformed.
"It boggles my mind that they went into my heart, repaired my valve, and now I feel so healthy," he said. "The change has been remarkable. I feel like my heart is working efficiently. I feel clearheaded."
Booher is coming to terms with not being able to go back to a community he loves. Altadena is a special place for him, a mix of architecture, mom-and-pop shops and tight-knit neighbors. He and his husband plan to spend time at their cabin in Big Bear where he'll continue to write.
"Emotionally, it is starting to sink in," he said. "When I was in the hospital, I was recovering, so I didn't have the chance to internalize what happened. I have an incredible support system as I am working through my grief of losing everything. I'm grateful our dogs are safe, we are safe and have a place to stay. And I'm grateful for a healthy heart. That's what we have to hold on to."
Read more on the Cedars-Sinai Blog: Treatment Options for Heart Valve Disease