Auckland dad had hidden heart issue that would have killed him within years – how he found out, and what saved him
The doctor did an echocardiogram – an ultrasound that creates images of the heart – and a few days later called Hall-White back in for an appointment.
The scan had found an aortic aneurysm, which happens when a section of the aorta (the main artery that carries blood away from the heart) wall is damaged, causing it to bulge or swell.
āItās like a hose,ā Hall-White says. āItās got a weakness in it, and it just starts bulging out.ā
A rupture often results in death, and in many cases there is little to no warning of the condition.
āI was planning on doing a 100km ultra [marathon] at the end of the year. The cardiologist said, āOh jeepers, if youād done that, this thing would have burst and you would have died. Donāt push yourself until we have the surgery.āā
That happened in July 2023. During surgery it was discovered the aortic valve had been stretched, and it was replaced by a mechanical valve. Hall-White also suffered complete heart block, which is an emergency where the heart is unable to properly pump blood.
He woke up with an external pacemaker – ālike a walkie-talkie that has wires that go into your heartā – and the news heād be on blood thinners for the rest of his life. The intubation tube had also damaged his vocal cords, taking his voice completely for a week and reducing it to this day.
āThey were hoping my heart would bounce back after surgery. Every day while I was in MercyAscot Hospital they would switch off the external pacemaker, and I would start to lose consciousness, and they would go, āOkay, thatās not working.ā
āAfter a week of that, they said, āNo, your heartās not coming back, we need to put in a pacemaker.āā
That surgery happened a week later. A gruelling, slow recovery followed. Hall-White had six weeks off work, and struggled when he returned. He lived alone with his teenage sons, so his partner and mother took turns staying with them, and driving him to appointments.
āIt was pretty scary for the kids. To see me go from being very fit and running marathons to barely being able to walk up the stairs. I live in a three-storey townhouse so even getting around my home became difficult.
āI couldnāt lift anything more than a kg. I had to sleep a lot. Iām a stomach sleeper, and I couldnāt sleep on my stomach because in open heart surgery your sternum is cut open and then attached back together with wire.
āYou go into the surgery feeling all right and pretty fit. And I came out of it and felt like I was 90.ā
The ordeal took an unexpected mental toll, too.
āEven now, Iām not keen on going into the hospital.ā
However, the recovery also showed Hall-White the love and support he has in his life. People dropped off frozen meals, and visited him frequently, which boosted his spirits given his outgoing and social nature.
Hall-White completed a half-marathon last year (with his cardiologistās blessing), but the 46-year-old isnāt sure he will return to running longer distances.
āThe mental scars are still there ⦠Iāve become a bit scared of pushing myself ⦠it was pretty terrifying. To this day, it feels like a bad dream.ā
The experience contributed to a change in career, from IT sales to a self-employed insurance adviser, talking to people about disability and health insurance.
āI had trauma insurance that I had cancelled a few years beforehand, because I thought, āIām young and relatively young and fitā⦠it would have come in really handy. I could have taken a year off work and recovered properly.ā
Hall-White agreed to speak to the Herald to support the Heart Foundationās ābig heart appealā, which runs this Friday, February 21, and Saturday, February 22, and will see hundreds of volunteers collecting donations. Online donations can also be made at heartfoundation.org.nz/donation
Money raised will fund vital research, and help young cardiologists train overseas, to ensure specialists here are world-class.
Gisborne Hospital cardiologist Dr Gerry Devlin, the Heart Foundationās medical director, said great strides had been made since the charity was established 56 years ago, but heart disease remains New Zealandās single biggest killer, claiming more than 6500 lives a year.
Globally, reductions in the burden of heart disease had plateaued, Devlin said, and that appeared to be the case here, too. The exact reasons were still unknown, he said.
āIn our own country the burden of heart disease falls unequally on MÄori and Pacific, and we need to understand that, and thatās some of the research that we are funding.ā
Those reliant on the public system face big wait lists and delays that are ānot acceptableā, Devlin said.
āWeāve got waitlists to access specialists, weāve got waitlists to access diagnostic tests once you see a specialist. And then if you need surgery – you need stenting, or whatever – weāve got wait lists that arenāt moving as quickly as any of us would like.ā
Hall-White, whose disease surfaced during a marathon, wants people to know the issue isnāt only one for the aged or unhealthy.
āYou donāt have to be old and decrepit for this sort of stuff to happen.ā
Nicholas Jones is an investigative reporter at the Herald. He was a finalist for Reporter of the Year at the 2024 Voyager Media Awards, and has won numerous national media awards for his reporting and feature writing.