Fighting cancer without losing heart
April 2025
|Toronto Life
How UHN's Peter Munk Cardiac Centre transforms outcomes for those with cardiac issues caused by cancerCanada's top disease killers
-
In early April of 2020, Lori Chen felt a lump in her breast while she was in the shower. The Toronto-based pharmacist was 36 years old and had a two-and-a-half-year-old son, and it was early in the pandemic, when much of the world was in lockdown. She cried for days.
Lori decided to focus on her family and the things that were within her control. She started chemotherapy, underwent a mastectomy and began to feel that her life would soon return to some semblance of normal. That was until an echocardiogram in October 2020 revealed that she was in imminent danger of heart failure.
Lori, who had no symptoms of heart disease, says this new diagnosis was even scarier than discovering she had breast cancer.
"When I thought of heart failure, I pictured my grandmother who had swollen ankles and trouble walking up stairs. I didn't have anything like that. I was in shock." She had always known that her cancer treatment could affect her heart, but now she was facing the reality of that risk.
A toll on the heart
Cancer treatment-related cardiotoxicity is damage to the cardiovascular system caused by otherwise life-saving approaches to combat the disease. "Surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy-all of these are related to some form of cardiovascular toxicity," says Dr. Dinesh Thavendiranathan, an international expert in the field of cardio-oncology and part of the team that cared for Lori at UHN's Peter Munk Cardiac Centre in Toronto, home to the largest cardiotoxicity clinical program in Canada.
هذه القصة من طبعة April 2025 من Toronto Life.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Toronto Life
Toronto Life
Funny Money
Policy analyst by day, stand-up comedian by night: how a 28-year-old midtowner spends her income
1 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
THE INCREDIBLE EDIBLE BUCKET LIST
THREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE DISHES TO TRY BEFORE THE YEAR IS OUT-OUR DISH-A-DAY GUIDE TO EATING SPECTACULARLY WELL IN 2026
5 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
Beginner's Luck
When the condo market went cold, these 20-somethings pounced to buy their starter home
4 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
BATTLE FOR THE BAY
How the country's oldest corporation came to its bitter end
21 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
Last Call
The Imperial Pub was a beloved local haunt for more than 80 years. I spent my entire life behind the bar
4 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
Gym Dandy
Five new fitness clubs that are hard-core, exclusive and ready for their close-ups
6 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
The best things to see, do, read and hear this month in Toronto
Amil Niazi's bracingly honest essays on work and motherhood (“The Mindfuck of Midlife” comes to mind) have made her a cult favourite in certain corners of the web.
3 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
Renata Fast's Liberty Village
The Olympic gold medallist shares her go-to spots
2 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
KEVIN SUPREME
KEVIN O’LEARY IS MANY THINGS: REALITY TV BULLY, TRUMP APOLOGIST AND, NOW, LAUDED ACTOR. IN MARTY SUPREME, HE PLAYS A SUPERVILLAIN— IN OTHER WORDS, HIMSELF. A CONVERSATION ABOUT THE OSCAR RACE, HIS AI OBSESSION AND HIS QUEST FOR WORLD DOMINATION
15 mins
January 2026
Toronto Life
The Hybrid Evangelist
As the union boss of Ontario's civil servants, Dave Bulmer has a few choice words for Doug Ford and his back-to-office mandate
3 mins
January 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

