Your heartbeat is as unique as your fingerprint.

And at Baptist Health, we believe that’s how your heart care should be, too. So we focus on your specific cardiac needs, from preventive care to some of the most advanced procedures. It’s why more people trust their hearts to Baptist Health than to any other hospital system in Kentucky and Southern Indiana. 

Do you know your unique heart care needs?

Baptist Health is here to help you take good care of your heart. So we want you to be aware of risk factors that may apply to you. Discuss them with your doctor to get truly personalized care for your one-of-a-kind heart.

  • Previous COVID Diagnosis

    While most people recover fully in a few weeks, having had COVID - even a mild case - does put you at a greater risk of certain heart conditions. So you need to pay special attention to your heart.

  • Older Women

    Certain conditions such as migraines and asthma, and even preeclampsia or gestational diabetes during pregnancy, can put you at a higher risk for heart problems later in life.

  • Older Men

    Low testosterone can be considered a risk factor for cardiovascular health. And erectile dysfunction that is related to blood flow may be an early indicator of heart disease.

  • Depression

    There's a strong link between depression and heart disease, and either one can raise the risk of the other.

  • Black Adults

    Black adults are at higher risk than white adults for many heart conditions. But proper preventive care can help close the gap and improve your long-term heart health.

Get Started.

Talk with your primary care provider about your heart’s unique needs and the specialized care at Baptist Health. If you don’t have a primary care provider, we can help you find one dedicated to bringing you care that’s centered on you.

Patient Stories

Jerry's Story

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Life in Richmond's been busy. Everything's scheduled.

Yeah. It's wild and crazy most of the time.

It was just a normal day, and we were going to Cincinnati to spend the afternoon, evening with our other kids. And I knew I wasn't gonna get to the Y, so I said, I'm gonna go to the sauna. Literally within five minutes, I I knew something was up.

I asked Mendy if we had any, heartburn medication. And she said, Why? You never have heartburn. We were stopping on the way at the boat dealership to pick up a trailer, and we got over to the dealership.

And I said to Mendy, I said, I don't feel I don't feel like getting this thing out right now. And she said, well, let's go to the hospital. Something's wrong. So I said, maybe if I drink this water, get a little bit of rest, you drive, I'll sleep a little bit.

So she stops in Lexington in Hamburg to get some heartburn medication for me. And while she was there, she actually got baby aspirin too.

I get the baby aspirin thinking that it is something related to his heart. And so we end up going on. I did a lot of praying from, to up to Cincinnati.

Next morning, she gave me more of the baby aspirin, and we drove home. I said, I'm gonna take my blood pressure. And I took my blood pressure. It was like one seventy eight over one fifteen.

I said, you know, we should probably just go.

When he arrived, his EKG, showed really that, he had more or less completed his heart attack, but he was having ongoing chest symptoms, which prompted us to do a heart catheterization. And sure enough, the artery to the front of his heart was a hundred percent blocked with a blood clot.

Doctor Breeding is showing me the picture of the blockage and he said, everything in your life has to change now.

My mom has had colon cancer. My grandmother died from colon cancer. I've been doing screenings for fifteen years. I thought, how crazy is that?

That I was that concerned with one aspect of health, but not really my entire health.

And I thought, it's kinda like going in and saying, you know, change the brakes on my car, but I don't want you to touch the oil. Don't worry about that. We'll never change the oil.

If you have had a heart attack, and it was treated with a stent or bypass surgery, you get the benefit of that procedure, but you get additional benefit by following through with the cardiac rehab.

Not only do they teach you how to exercise in a way that's maximally beneficial for your heart, it's done in a controlled environment, so there's less anxiety about starting an exercise routine because your levels are all monitored.

I appreciate his perspective really well on on really all the things that he addressed with us in terms of heart health.

We have long recognized that individuals who tend to be very stressed out do have higher instances of cardiac arrest, higher instances of heart attacks, more vascular disease. If it seems in talking to a patient they are leading a very high stress life to try to develop some strategies to control that.

There's a lot of changes, really. One is diet. I think another is the priority on how we handle life, how much we can try to reduce stress. Sometimes family requires more of your time. Sometimes your work requires a little more of your time. But how again you make them work in harmony?

I have had an incredibly good experience at Baptist Health Richmond.

You can trust the services that they'll provide in our local hospital because they have qualified people who care.

I mean, it was really close probably to a totally different outcome.

We're very glad that we got there when we did because they basically said you shouldn't even have walked in the hospital.

It really has given me a new perspective of how fortunate we are.

Dr. Allison Rains's Story

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A day in the ER, it's it's, different every day. We usually see around one hundred and twenty patients a day in the ER. You never really know what you're gonna get. That was one of the things that drew me to the ER.

We have three children and we have twins that are twelve and then we have an eight year old who's in first grade.

Really not a second in the day, you know, to rest. Kind of every day we're going to bed, you know, ten or eleven o'clock getting up at four or five and nonstop, but I wouldn't have it any other way.

It was around four o'clock. My alarm went off. I got the snooze button a few times.

Finally, I set up in bed and immediately upon sitting up in bed, I developed a severe pain in the center of my chest. I described a kind of like a pressure almost as if I was in a vice.

She was kinda holding her chest, and she was very pale and and sweaty. I mean, you know, I could tell something was not right. So, yeah, I said, gosh. You look like you're having a heart attack.

I knew that morning that something was terribly wrong, and I was ready to go to the ER.

When doctor Allison Rains came, the EKG looked abnormal. The blood tests for heart attack were elevated, plus she had an ultrasound done of the heart that showed some abnormality in contractility, specifically of a particular region that alerted us all that there's a distinct possibility of a heart attack occurring, and that prompted a cardiac catheterization where we identified a blockage and treated her with angioplasty.

As a physician, you never imagine yourself being the patient, but in the moment, I knew my husband trusted his partner and always talked highly of doctor Bose.

And doctor Bose was great. He talked to me throughout the entire procedure, explaining what he was doing, when he found the blockage.

He relayed that information to me and explained what he was doing to fix it and so I knew that I was in the best hands possible.

It was surreal, you know, with your wife back there and sorry.

Waiting in the recovery area.

I think right from the start, she had the ingredients of her timely care, and I think that's really important in, identifying heart disease, especially in women who sometimes may present in somewhat unusual ways. Chest pain is the most common presentation in women having a heart attack. But having said that, the atypical presentation such as arm pain, back pain, sweating, feeling weak, being short of breath, feeling dizzy, passing out is far more in women what we call atypical symptoms compared to men. Seek care early because delayed care can result in devastating complications.

As we say related to a heart attack, that time is muscle.

The months prior to all this, I had been having some odd symptoms. Ultimately, they diagnosed me with lupus, and they felt that I developed inflammation around the coronary vessel, and that had probably led to some compression of the vessel and that narrowing in that vessel led to a clot formation, which caused the heart attack.

Taking care of a colleague, especially who's a health care provider, is almost a multiplier effect where she not only is doing better and doing well and come back to work, but also has taken the initiative to increase this knowledge of women and heart disease.

This phase and age of life that we're in where parents are busy and kids are busy, parents forget to take care of themselves.

You know your body. If something feels off, listen to your body.

Take the time for yourself.

It really puts things into perspective.

You kind of realize what's important in life and try to cut out some of the chaos and just focus on the important things.

Jill's Story

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A horse gives you so much. I mean, when you think of what we ask a horse to do, I mean, what we're asking these mares to do, having babies and racing at the racetrack, we're asking them to be brave. They trust. They really are very trusting animals and very smart. They're the best.

Twenty two years ago, I had a fall going over a coop. He went this way, I went that way, and I fell on my back on the hard ground. A year later, I'm just getting a regular check checkup with my doctor, and he said, Jill, you know, you've got a pretty significant heart murmur. That was my very start of all of this hard stuff.

When I fell, that's where they feel like that's when it happened, when the small tear occurred.

The first time I met her, I knew that this was gonna work because as a heart patient, you always question if you're okay or not okay. It's scary.

Once you've had any kind of a cardiac problem, the heart is really your focus. She's so positive. She just wants a normal life. And so anything that I can do to help her achieve that goal is well worth it.

She makes you feel really safe. I think I truly trusted everything she said. She led the show for me.

I was riding, you know, continuously, and I was feeling really bad. Like, I couldn't stay in a canter without my heart just feeling like it was beating out of my chest.

When Jill came to see me in June, she knew that something wasn't quite right. She was starting to feel a little more short of breath. She didn't have quite as much energy as she did previously.

She had developed a head bob, and her head was literally going up and down at times. And when she was resting, her friends would notice that kind of thing. In Jill's case, she had calcium around the annulus of the valve plus the valve leaked very badly. She was not excited about having to undergo another open procedure.

And fortunately, over the last fifteen years, we have this wonderful transcatheter aortic valve ability.

She said, I think you're a great candidate for TAVR, which I didn't know anything about that procedure at all.

So the advantage of a transcatheter aortic valve is that the chest is not opened. We go up through the artery in the leg. We follow the aorta up to where the aortic valve is. We take a valve and put it inside the native valve or the bioprosthetic valve in her case. Expand the balloon, expand the valve, the balloon comes out, and you're done. The whole procedure takes less than an hour, usually closer to thirty minutes, and most people go home the next day. After surgery, they'll be free to go back and be the person that they used to be, be as active as they wanna be, and resume their life.

I feel like so strong because doctor Hollingsworth said, you can do whatever you want. You can exert yourself, which I was always a little hesitant to do because I was afraid that I would be doing too much to the heart muscle. She's pretty much cleared me to do whatever I wanna do.

She is a model patient. And if everybody took care of themselves like she does, we would have a lot less people returning for repeat surgeries and repeat procedures.

My experience at Baptist Health has been amazing. That's my hospital.

Yeah. Doctor Hollingsworth said, live your life the way you wanna live it. Do whatever you wanna do. And that's how everyone should live.

Rick's Story

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Well, actually, I think on our third date, we decided we're gonna get married through thick and thin, better or worse, sicker or poor, sometimes more sicker.

We have four grandchildren.

We had we had four sons, but, our fourth son was a resident physician.

We went on vacation with him in January of twenty three.

And, when he went back to residency, we could hear it in his voice that he was not doing well. [Rick and Debbie's son died by suicide on February 12, 2023]

And, so that's very traumatic.

It's hard on all of us. Heart disease and, mental health are epidemics.

What's very special about Brian Toole Racing is that we have a family culture and it's very important and people legitimately care about each other.

They call me the flying mustache because I move so fast. As much as I love my work, I I confess that I take it too seriously sometimes. I was at an off-site meeting. At the end of the meeting, I got pictures of these parts that we were, you know, hotshotting from Iowa and they're full of holes.

And I saw these pictures and it same thing. Boom. Right in the stomach. I'm like, oh.

[Two prior heart attacks in the early 2000s were both preceded by severe stomach pain. Rick knew what was happening.]

Rick had had a stent placed years ago and when he came into the hospital with chest pain, the stent had closed off.

And the first thing the cardiologist did was open up the stent to the RCA, the right coronary artery. And when he did that, he fibrillated, got him back, and then found out he had, triple vessel disease. All three main arteries had blockages. So then he was referred to me for surgery.

We Googled best heart surgeon in Louisville and doctor Pollock came up.

Our oldest son, Ricky, we call him Ricky.

Yeah. Richard the third.

Internal medicine doc. He he was we did FaceTime with doctor Pollock in the office, and Ricky was able to ask questions, and that gave Ricky peace of mind.

Doctor Pollock to his credit was very not defensive at all and answered every question to everyone's satisfaction and it was just such a pleasure to work with and it just gave us great confidence.

It's important for the patient to have choice. We were happy that he chose us to do surgery. What we did was remove veins from the legs and use an artery that runs in the chest wall, the internal thoracic artery to do four bypasses and this is done with the heart lung machine.

And because of his history of atrial fibrillation, we also isolated his left atrial appendage. That reduces the risk of strokes later on if he has any episodes of atrial fibrillation. Function after the surgery with the four bypasses was pretty normal.

I was walking in ICU, I think around twelve hours or less after surgery. And, I I really couldn't believe how pain free the whole experience was.

One thing I wanna stress is how amazing when I say staff, I mean all of the staff Yeah. At Baptist, they helped us through this Yeah.

Because we were scared. Yeah. We were very frightened.

I went to cardiac rehab, and it was a great experience.

We know that physically rehab helps, and that's monitored exercise. And it also improves function of the heart and it helps with the bypasses too. It's important to really modify the risk factors that we can. There are genetic factors that we can't modify, but we can modify cholesterol. We can stop smoking, we can work on diabetes and we can work on diet. And I think the results long term from bypass surgery are much better now than they were twenty years ago because of the things we can modify.

I have living proof that you could get world class health care, a world class cardiac thoracic surgery from Baptist Health, and I can't imagine any better care. I mean, I can't imagine how it could go any better.

Well, and I think that Baptist Health doesn't just concentrate on the surgical aspect of all this, it's the spiritual aspect too.

It really makes you take stock of your life and your priorities.

I I probably am a bit obsessed about my work, and I need to focus a little more on my little more on my wife and my family.

For the patient, you know, you're focused on yourself and, and then there's putting stress on other people around you.

That's what love's about.

Yeah. I appreciate it. I love you. I love you too.

[If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline or chat at 988lifeline dot org]

Violet's Story

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When my son passed away three years ago, it was time for a new start, and that's kind of what this property means to us.

The gardening is all raised beds because we live literally on a mountain, you know, and then the heart attack happened and a lot got put on hold when that happened.

You know how you see the bubbles rise in a Coke or Sprite or something?

That is kind of what I felt.

And I was like, that's not normal.

That shouldn't be happening this way. And my husband looks at me and he asked, he's like, are you okay? And I said, I don't think I'm okay.

When they took her to the cath lab when she got here, they found that she had a one hundred percent blockage in the large artery that goes around to the left side of the heart. So we look at three major ones down the front, to the right, and to the left, and the entire left side of her heart was really not getting any blood flow at all.

When he put the stent in and then open it up, that was the first deep breath I had taken in two weeks because I was like barely breathing. I was just I had no idea. I just thought I was so tired.

When I met Violet, she was overwhelmed and she was scared, but she was determined. And in that moment, she said, what do I need to do? And so when a patient has set their mind to, I want to own my health, I want to improve my health, I want to be active in this role, it really makes my job a lot easier.

This vest lets us send people home safely if they are at risk for going into those life threatening dysrhythmias. So they wear this all the time except for when they're in the shower.

And if they were to go into that rhythm, it would sense it and it would deliver a shock.

You know, it's temporary to get you to be safe and stay alive until you can get to help or until help can get to you. It'll give you a lot of confidence.

We talked about diet. We talked about exercise. We talked about cardiac rehabilitation, which she took part in.

I will tell every soul on this planet, you need to go to cardiac rehab. The people in the cardiac rehab are awesome.

It allows us to get people moving in a safe way.

People can just go out and walk in their street, but they don't have a heart monitor on, and they don't have a registered nurse watching them saying, okay. I need you to take a little bit easier now. Let's let your heart recover, or you've got some room here. Let's push. Let's go even faster.

When I got to cardiac rehab, I was not in good shape. They do an in test and an out test.

When I left, I did it half the time and I had lost a lot of weight because I stuck to our diet plan for me.

I stuck to the exercise.

I took my meds. I took my blood pressure. I kept my diary. I did the thing and they took the rest away and a couple of medicines have disappeared.

But Kay has never let go of my hand the whole way, you know. And that to me is something you don't find a lot of, but I found it at the heart failure clinic. I have found it with Kaye. I have found it with heart rehab.

I found it at Baptist. They're not gonna make me do it on my own.

Violet's got a lot of eyes on her heart health these days.

Even machines need checkups.

You know, we take her car for an oil change every three months. So now that she has heart disease, she gets routine checkups, and we make sure that everything is exactly where we want it to keep her from developing new blockages.

Now I'm finally living again.

Healing comes in many forms, and sometimes that form is a very serious wake up call.

I have been so blessed with the Baptist care team. Baptist Health Corbin has been an amazing place to take my medical care from.

They care.

That's that's the best way I can put it is, Baptist Health Corbin, they care.

I actually felt like somebody cared, you know, so, yeah, they're kind of special to me.

James's Story

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I have a beautiful wife named Amy, and I have ten grandkids.

A perfect day for me, getting up in the morning, sitting drinking coffee with the wife, Amy, and us getting on the motorcycle and just taking off. It's relaxing. Just my perfect day. Just getting up every day and enjoying my family.

I was at my grandson's baseball game.

My legs started hurting and hurting. I'd stand up. I'd sit down. I'd stand up. I'd sit down.

I made it through the night, and then it just started turning purple. So that's when I went to the checking myself in emergency at Baptist, and they had the emergency surgery. It was a clot that was blocking the blood flow on my leg. I had a clot in my heart.

I had a clot in my lung. Doctor Chinchurian at Baptist Floyd, I mean, he took over my medical condition.

Wonderful, smart doctor.

When we worked his heart up, his heart was very enlarged, and he had a a big clot within the heart. But he also had a condition called left bundle branch block, an electrical issue in his heart to where the message for the heart to beat was not being distributed evenly.

So if you think of it as a pump, the walls weren't contracting at the same time. The right side was coming in first and then the left side, and that was making the pump very inefficient.

As a result, his heart function had decreased quite a bit. We implanted a special defibrillator called biventricular ICD, which synchronizes the heartbeats to where it's beating as naturally as possible.

And of course, we also introduced some medications as well. And within a few months his heart function recovered to almost normal. He did a lot of good things on his part with rehab and eating healthy.

Our cardiac rehab, it's a medically supervised program for exercise.

When Jim came in, he wasn't feeling very well and had had issues with his heart. We worked with him, setting him up in an exercise program where you do small amounts on treadmills, bicycles, arm ergometers, or what what people call arm bicycles.

From that, we increase as they get better. There's a lot of education that goes into what we do with the patients, and it's a really, it's a multidisciplinary approach.

You got all these nurses there, all these people, all these doctors that are right there. That gave me comfort. I work out at rehab, and then I can go to a gym. You know? We do it, and it's fun, and we get to do it together. I start eating better, taking care of myself, and I was about about forty five pounds.

To see a patient who really had a whole lot of problems to come in and tell us, I'm going to the gym. I'm you know, my a one c is under control. I don't smoke. I've I've kept my weight down. It's so gratifying.

Baptist Health Floyd offers a wide variety of treatment options for all aspects of cardiac care, not to mention amazing physicians, amazing staff, nurses. I feel like I'm making a positive impact. People like Jim with good results keep me going.

Baptist Health Floyd was amazing. The staff was amazing. I just keep chugging. I feel proud of myself.

I want to help other people, you know, not to give up. Look at me now. I'm married. Got a beautiful wife.

I just love life now. I wanna stay here as long as I can.

Bill's Story

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♪ [music]

♪ - [Bill]

Well, I was a basket case. I was 300 plus, smoked. I used to feel miserable, half sick, you know, all the time. Dr.

Mehta and I met each other at the behest of another doctor that was treating me for pneumonia, and I needed a heart doctor. Dr. Mehta was that doctor.

- [Dr. Mehta]

He was very special in the sense that he had a blockage that had been taken care of multiple times in another institution. And when he came to me, he was so down on himself, that why was it happening again and again. And I tried to explain to him what are the consequences and what are the things that have led to it. And he stopped smoking, he readily accepted bypass surgery, where anybody else would have said, "Try the angioplasty again," and he did so good.

- All the doctors that I had seen and the years and the age that I am, it seems like I would know what to do, right? Well, all that wasn't working, until Dr. Mehta.

- Everybody needs to be treated differently. If one technique doesn't work, try another way. Ask them what do they want to do. "Do you think you should be doing it?

Do you think you should be stopping smoking? If so, what will help you?" Different ways of asking will bring out the emotions in the person, and they'll be able to explain to you why they're not able to do what they want to do. ♪ [music]

♪ - Tyson...Ty's father worked it out to where they could take me in a wheelchair to the room, actual room, you know, and handed him to me. ♪ [music]

♪ I want to see him go to school.

- And my philosophy is we're all taking care of the whole patient. And I believe in preventive care. Diet, and exercise is emphasized a lot in my practice.

- Well, I had to have a plan. I put it on a spreadsheet to say where did I want to be, and when, and then put two lines on there, and it speaks to you. ♪ [music]

♪ I asked Dr. Mehta if he could give me the heart cath through my wrist, and he did, and I think I was the first one. And it was successful, they did it, there's no problem. That's one thing I like about Baptist Health and Dr.

Mehta is a formula to keep you healthy because they sure have kept me healthy now. ♪ [music]

♪ I used to have about three hours a day of activity, of something, three hours. The rest of the time, I was on a sleep app with oxygen. Now, I've got 13 hours. I'm not on oxygen.

The Barn is where I do something. I kind of like a challenge, you know. Can you fix it? Yeah, I can.

Bring it here. I like to see somebody good at their job, right? He's got it going on.

- Oh, my team is awesome. We believe in doing the best we can, not just say it but truly incorporate it into our day-to-day practice so patients can get the best possible care that they can get.

- Dr. Mehta was my doctor, and thank God he was, because I'm a firm believer that I wouldn't be alive if it wasn't for Dr. Mehta. If a conversation came up with anybody with me that's slow pulling, said they're looking for a heart doctor.

I'll say, "Well, let me tell you about this guy." If they ever came to me, I would plead them. "I'll take you over there. I'll show you where it is."

Tell you what, life doesn't get much better than this right here, does it? ♪ [music]

Brittany's Story

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♪ [music]

♪ - [Brittany]

"Go hard or go home" is kind of a motto that I've always lived by. You know, I was the task manager. What am I going to do today? I'm going to knock this off my list, this off my list, this off my list.

And I haven't made a to-do list since August 28th. I worked from the office on a Wednesday. I left work and decided to exercise after work before I started my evening chores of cooking dinner, and homework, and bath time. And I found myself really struggling to just get through the warmup.

I knew something wasn't quite right. So, I decided to just rest to give the workout up for the day and had dinner with the family, took a shower, and just started to have a lot of severe back pain. I found myself just a bit disoriented with my breath and just an overall feeling of sickness. I started to have neck pain and jaw pain.

Uniquely, those are symptoms of a heart attack in women. So, I made my way to the ER, they took me back almost immediately, and within 10 minutes had confirmed that there was definitely something going on. So, I stayed the night here in La Grange. When we made it to the cath lab, Doctor Ummat came in and she talked me through the process as though it was the first time she was explaining it to anyone.

- [Dr. Ummat]

Brittany came in with chest pain, and I think she's a good example of a patient who has none of the classic risk factors for heart disease.

- She told me when she was actually inserting the cath, I asked her if she saw a blockage, she said, "I absolutely do. It is completely occluded." And it seemed to be just a few minutes of a procedure that obviously saved my life. I worried a lot about my son, this family, how am I going to be able to take care of all of these people that, you know, really, really rely on me.

You know, the morning after the stent was placed, the heart cath was done, Doctor Kemp came to my room and I just kept asking her, you know, "Is this the beginning of the end?"

- [Dr, Kemp]

It's hard for anyone to be kind of faced with an event like this, especially something that could take you away from your family permanently. As a mom, that's a big pill to swallow. So, you have to recognize that there's going to be a lot of anxiety. There's going to be a lot of sadness.

There's going to be a lot of why me and all of these are very, very, very valid and very appropriate feelings. We talked about very close follow-ups and cardiac rehab and all of these things that have been shown to help someone recover emotionally from an event like this.

- Knowing that she said this is normal and you will get through this and you will be okay allowed me to just rebound, you know, very quickly.

- Heart disease is not just a physical problem. It affects us in other ways as well, especially emotionally. There are certain things we can't change. We can't change our genes.

We can't change our age. But we have so many things that are in our power to change, the way we eat, the way we exercise. We have a giant role in our own health and taking charge, especially of our heart health.

- I find myself sitting down and listening to my son tell a story. And before then I found myself saying, "Tell me later." "Hang on." "Give me a minute."

"Can we talk about it later?" And until you realize that you may not have that later, you start to appreciate it a lot more. What gets my blood pumping is this life I'm living. ♪ [music]

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