NW coach Randy Walker dies of heart attack

ant80

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That is horrible. He was one of the coaches that made the most of what little resources he had. My deepest condolences to his family and the wildcat fans.

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=2505033

EVANSTON, Ill. -- Northwestern football coach Randy Walker died Thursday night of an apparent heart attack. He was 52.
Walker, who joined the Wildcats in 1999 after nine years at Miami (Ohio), guided the team to a 7-5 record and a berth in the Sun Bowl this past season. He became the first coach in school history since C.M. Hollister (1899-1902) to register four seasons of at least six wins.
"Our deepest sympathies go out to his wife, Tammy, and his two children, Abbey and Jamie," Northwestern director of athletics Mark Murphy said in a press release. "This is a devastating loss, not only for our athletic program, but for the entire Northwestern community. Randy truly embraced Northwestern and its mission, and cared deeply for his student-athletes, both on and off the field."
The university will conduct a news conference Friday at 10 a.m. ET.
A native of Troy, Ohio, Walker left Miami as the winningest coach in school history, posting a 59-35-5 mark with the RedHawks. He graduated from the university in 1976.
With Northwestern, Walker compiled a 37-46 overall record and led the team to a share of the Big Ten title and a trip to the Alamo Bowl in 2000. The first coach in school history to guide the team to three bowl games, Walker also helped earn the Wildcats a spot in the 2003 Motor City Bowl.
Walker, who received a contract extension through 2011 in April, ranks 27th on the NCAA's all-time wins list (96) for active Division I-A coaches with at least five years of experience.
Less than two years ago, Walker was hospitalized with myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle commonly caused by a virus.

This is
 

jiggafini19

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I heard this on the radio today on the way in to work and was stunned. Such a terrible thing to happen to a man of 52 years of age.

I think he would have stayed at NU his entire life.
 

KMac151993

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This is just terrible, I actually did a double take and all I could do was gasp when I heard this news. He was one of the all-time good guy coaches and a true model of what a coach should be like....he took a team that was in the dumps and had them back to the level of respectable. Not only a huge loss for Northwestern and the Big Ten but for the whole college football family, he will be missed.
 

scooper

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I know from his time at Miami that he was a first class guy. This is a terrible shame. My condolences to his family, Northwestern University and Miami University.
 
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cpozeznik

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I sure hope CW is paying attention to this news. Coach Randy Walker appeared to be in "decent" shape and apparently the stresses of college football did him in at an early age. CW is definately at risk with the extra time working, decreased sleep, and especially b/c he's way overweight. I wouldn't be surprised if he could be labeled by a medical doctor as clinically obese. RIP to Walker, but CW should really be more concerned with his own health, and learn from his colleague's unfortunate ending. If CW truely wants to win a NC during his tenureat ND, he should seriously consider dropping some pounds. Just my 2 cents.
 

KMac151993

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My Dad is 53 and its stuff like this that always makes you really enjoy the time you have together.
 

jiggafini19

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cpozeznik said:
I sure hope CW is paying attention to this news. Coach Randy Walker appeared to be in "decent" shape and apparently the stresses of college football did him in at an early age. CW is definately at risk with the extra time working, decreased sleep, and especially b/c he's way overweight. I wouldn't be surprised if he could be labeled by a medical doctor as clinically obese. RIP to Walker, but CW should really be more concerned with his own health, and learn from his colleague's unfortunate ending. If CW truely wants to win a NC during his tenureat ND, he should seriously consider dropping some pounds. Just my 2 cents.

I don't think anyone can disagree with this.
 

Irish Envy

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If it were as easy as dropping a couple pounds, I'm sure Charlie would do it. If I'm not mistaken, he almost died as result of his weight loss surgery and additionally, he has lost a lot of weight since having the surgery.
 
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cpozeznik

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And when I said that he should drop "some pounds" I was thinking a significant amount of body weight. If I were Weis's doctor I would not be happy for him being "under 300 pounds". That in my opinion is just ridiculous. I am a huge CW and ND fan, but I have to say that Weis should be setting a good example of what competetor should look and act like. He has the mental ability and work ethic worthy of a champ, but health and physical well being pale in comparison.
 

Vince Young

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To be fair, Shaquille O'Neal is considered to be "obese" by government standards, so I don't put much faith in the clinical definition of "obese." But yeah, that does make me nervous about C-Dub, and I hope he continues to lose weight in a slow, steady and safe manner.
 
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cpozeznik

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Shaq (athlete, can dunk) is 7'0 tall 330ish lb. Weis is 5'10''-6'00'' 300lb. (Non athlete, a lot is fat). Definately not the same thing.
 
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NDXUFan

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fitnessvsfatness.gif


"Unfit, lean men had twice the risk of all-cause mortality as did fit, lean men and also had higher risk of all-cause mortality when compared with fit, obese men. The all-cause mortality rate of fit, obese men was not significantly different from that of fit, lean men … In summary, we found that obesity did not appear to increase mortality risk in fit men. For long-term health benefits we should focus on improving fitness by increasing physical activity rather than relying only on diet for weight control."
-American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1999
 
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NDXUFan

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I know we're told repeatedly that fat people are more prone to certain kinds of diseases, but are we really? "Given the enormous social pressure to lose weight, one might suppose there is clear and overwhelming evidence of the risks of obesity and the benefits of weight loss. Unfortunately, the data linking overweight and death, as well as the data showing the beneficial effects of weight loss, are limited, fragmentary, and often ambiguous. Most of the evidence is either indirect of derived from observational epidemiologic studies, many of which have serious methodoligic flaws. Many studies fail to consider confounding variables, which are extremely difficult to assess and control for in this type of study." ("Losing Weight--An Ill-Fated New Year's Resolution," The New England Journal of Medicine, January 1, 1998--Vol.338, No.1).

Could it be possible that fat people are being exploited by the multibillion dollar diet industry, and that the so called studies that supposedly "prove" how unhealthy we are, are misinterpreted to say just the opposite of what is really being found? "Obesity researchers' thinking is distorted most by the fact that almost everyone who funds their work is in the diet business. Scientists' careers depend on publishing studies, and they often have to scramble to get the money to do them. In 1995, the National Institutes of Health spent about $87 million on obesity research (out of a total budget of $11.3 billion), which funded only a small portion of the studies done that year; the lion's share was funded by companies that are in the business of promoting diet treatments. " 'The so-called clinical research in this field has been largely paid for by the formula and drug companies, ' "says Wayne Callaway(Professor of Endocrinology), himself a moderate who opposes most diet treatments in favor of long-term lifestyle changes. Researchers who oppose dieting don't stand much of a chance of getting funding from companies who know the research will undermine their product.

"Diet and pharmaceutical companies influence every step along the way of the scientific process. They pay for the ads that keep obesity journals publishing. They underwrite medical conferences, flying physicians around the country expense-free and paying them large lecture fees to attend." (Fraser, Laura, Losing It- America's Obsession With Weight and The Industry That Feeds On It, pg 211, 212 )
 
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NDXUFan

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I think some of you will find this post to be very interesting. This specialist is a Nephrologist. Kidney disease is one of the most complex fields in medicine. People that have to see a Nephrologist have kidney disease, like end stage renal(kidney) disease. Most of the time, a kidney patient has so many medical issues, the average primary care physician will not touch them with a ten foot pole. In addition, this gentleman holds a Ph.D. in Chemistry, years and years of hard math, most physicians only have one course in calculus. I know this because my father is a graduate level chemist and my brother holds a Ph.D. in Physics, from Northwestern, ironically.

Dr. Ravnskov:
http://www.ravnskov.nu/ncep_guidelines

New cholesterol guidelines for converting healthy people into patients

In the May 16 issue (2001) of the Journal of the American Medical Association an expert panel from the National Cholesterol Education Program has published new guidelines for "the detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood cholesterol" (read the paper). Their writing seems to be an attempt to put most of mankind on cholesterol-lowering diets and drugs. To do that, they have increased the number of risk factors that demands preventive measures, and expanded the limits for the previous ones.

But not only does the panel exaggerate the risk of coronary disease and the relevance of high cholesterol, it also ignores a wealth of contradictory evidence. The panel statements reveal that its members have little clinical experience and lack basic knowledge of the medical literature, or worse, they ignore or misquote all studies that are contrary to their view.

Here come a few examples of the panel’s false statements.

As an argument for using cholesterol-lowering drugs the panel claims that twenty percent of patients with coronary heart disease have a new heart attack after ten years. But to reach that number any minor symptom without clinical significance is included.

Most people survive even a major heart attack, many with few or no symptoms after recovery. What matters is how many die and this is much less than twenty percent.

The panel also recommends cholesterol-lowering drugs to all diabetics above 20, and to people with the metabolic syndrome. If you have at least three of the "risk factors" mentioned below, you are suffering from the metabolic syndrome:



Risk factor
Limits according to the NCEP expert panel

Abdominal obesity
Waist circumference above 88 cm in women; above 102 in men.
Some male "patients" can develop many risk factors with a waist circumference of only 94 cm

High triglycerides
150 mg/dl or more

Low HDL
Men less than 40 mg/dl
Women less than 50 mg/dl

High blood pressure
130/85 or higher

High fasting blood sugar
110 mg/dl or higher


Test yourself and your family! I guess that using these limits, most of you "suffer" from the metabolic syndrome. And this new combination of risk factors, says the panel, conveys a similar risk for future heart disease as for people who already have coronary heart disease.

Luckily, it is not true.

It is not true either, that cholesterol has a strong power to predict the risk of a heart attack in men above 65. In the 30 year follow-up of the Framingham population for instance, high cholesterol was not predictive at all after the age of forty-seven, and those whose cholesterol went down had the highest risk of having a heart attack! To cite the Framingham authors: ”For each 1 mg/dl drop of cholesterol there was an 11 % increase in coronary and total mortality (115).”

It is not true either, that high cholesterol is a strong, independent predictor for other individuals.

In most studies of women and of patients who already have had a heart attack, high cholesterol has little predictive power, if any at all.

In a large study of Canadian men high cholesterol did not predict a heart attack, not even after 12 years, and in Russia, low, not high cholesterol level, is associated with future heart attacks (read summary of paper

Most studies have shown that high cholesterol is a very weak risk factor or no risk factor at all for old people; see for instance the paper by Schatz et al., but there are many more. Considering that more than 90% of all cardiovascular deaths occur in people above 60, this fact should have stopped the cholesterol campaign years ago.

Also interesting is the fact, that in some families with the highest cholesterol levels ever seen in human beings, so-called familial hypercholesterolemia, the individuals do not get a heart attack more often than ordinary people, and they live just as long (read the paper and my comment).

Taken together such observations strongly suggest that high cholesterol is only a risk marker, a factor that is secondary to the real cause of coronary heart disease. It is just as logical to lower cholesterol to prevent a heart attack, as to lower an elevated body temperature to combat an underlying infection or cancer.

It has also escaped the panel’s attention that the effect of the new cholesterol-lowering drugs, the statins, goes beyond a lowering of cholesterol. The question is whether their cholesterol-lowering effect has any importance at all because the statins exert their effect whether cholesterol goes down a little or whether it goes down very much.

No doubt, the statins lower the risk of dying from a heart attack, at least in patients who already have had one, but the size of the effect is unimpressive. In one of the experiments for instance, the CARE trial, the odds of escaping death from a heart attack in five years for a patient with manifest heart disease was 94.3 %, which improved to 95.4 % with statin treatment

For healthy people with high cholesterol the effect is even smaller. The WOSCOPS trial studied that category of people and here the figures were 98.4 % and 98.8 %, respectively.

In the scientific papers and in the drug advertisements these small effects are translated to relative effect. In the mentioned WOSCOPS trial for instance, it is said that the mortality was lowered by 25 %, because the difference between a mortality of 1.6 % in the control group and 1.2 % in the treatment group is 25 %.

When presented with accurate statistics on the value of statins, almost all my patients have rejected such treatment. To claim that the statins dramatically reduce a persons risk for CHD, as was stated in the press by Claude Lenfant, the director of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, is a misuse of the English language.

The figures above do not take into account possible side effects of the treatment. In most animal experiments the statins, as well as most other cholesterol-lowering drugs, produce cancer (90), and they may do it in human beings also.

In one of the statin trials there were 13 cases of breast cancer in the group treated vid pravastatin (Pravachol®), but only one case in the untreated control group, a scaring fact that is never mentioned in the advertisements or the guidelines.

It is also an alarming fact that in one of the largest experiments, the EXCEL trial, total mortality after just one year's treatment with lovastatin (Mevacor®) was significantly higher among those receiving statin treatment. Unfortunately (or happily?) the trial was stopped before further observations could be made.

In human beings the effects of cancer-producing chemicals are not seen before the passage of decades. If the statins produce cancer in human beings, their small positive effect may eventually be transformed to a much larger negative one, because side effects usually appear in much higher percentages than the small positive ones noted in the trials.

Whereas possible serious side effects of the statins are hypothetical, those from the previous cholesterol-lowering drugs, still recommended by the panel, are real. Taking all experiments together, mortality from heart disease after treatment with these drugs was unchanged and total mortality increased, a fact that has given researchers outside the National Cholesterol Education Program and the American Heart Association much reason for concern.

The panel’s dietary recommendations represent the seventh major change since 1961. For instance, the original advice from the American Heart Association to eat as much polyunsaturated fat as possible has been reduced successively to the present “up to ten per cent”.

But why this limit? Seven years ago the main author of the new guidelines, Professor Scott Grundy, suggested an upper limit of only seven per cent, because, as he argued, an excess of polyunsaturated fat is toxic to the immune system and stimulates cancer growth in experimental animals and may also provoke gall stones in human beings. These warnings have never reached the public.

Furthermore, the panel ignores that a recent systematic review of all studies concerning the link between dietary fat and heart disease found no evidence that a manipulation of dietary fat has any effect on the development of atherosclerosis or cardiovascular disease (read summary of the paper -this paper won the Skrabanek Award 1998).

For instance, in a large number of studies, including the incredible number of more than 150,000 individuals, none of them found the predicted pattern of dietary fats in patients with heart disease.

No supportive association has been found either between the fat consumption pattern and the degree of atherosclerosis (arteriosclerosis) after death.

Most important, the mortality from heart disease and from all causes was unchanged in nine trials with more radical changes of dietary fat than ever suggested by the National Cholesterol Education Program, a result that was confirmed recently in another review (read the paper and my comment).

To suggest that diabetic patients should obtain more than 50 percent of their caloric intake from carbohydrates seems unusually bad advice. Many carbohydrates are quickly transformed into sugar inducing rapid changes in blood sugar and insulin levels and thus stimulating a rapid conversion of blood sugar to depot fat and chronic feelings of hunger. Diabetic patients should eat more fat.

Is it a coincidence that the Americans’ decreasing intake of fat during the last decade has been followed by a steady increase of their mean body weight and an epidemic increase of diabetes?

Instead of preventing cardiovascular disease the new guidelines may increase the mortality of other diseases, transform healthy individuals into unhappy hypochondriacs obsessed with the chemical composition of their food and their blood, reduce the income of producers of animal fat, undermine the art of cuisine, destroy the joy of eating, and divert health care money from the sick and the poor to the rich and the healthy. The only winners are the drug and imitation food industry and the researchers that they support.

Uffe Ravnskov
MD, PhD, independent researcher


More support for this line of thinking, many scientists disagree with the cholesterol theory:

http://www.thincs.org/members.htm
 
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NDXUFan

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President Bush is also considered to be overweight, I wonder how he does all of that running, if he is too overweight? You have to wonder......

Shark
 
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