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From Barnes & Noble
Barbara Natterson-Horowitz is a respected UCLA cardiologist and psychiatrist, but one of the most significant encounters of her professional life was with a furry tamarin monkey who was suffering from heart failure. What she learned from her cute little primate patient at the Los Angeles Zoo changed her views about health, animals, medicine, and humans. Already being touted as a potential offbeat bestseller comparable to works by Temple Grandin and Oliver Sacks.
Overview
In the spring of 2005, cardiologist Barbara Natterson-Horowitz was called to consult on an unusual patient: an Emperor tamarin at the Los Angeles Zoo. While examining the tiny monkey’s sick heart, she learned that wild animals can die of a form of cardiac arrest brought on by extreme emotional stress. It was a syndrome identical to a human condition but one that veterinarians called by a different name—and treated in innovative ways.
This remarkable medical parallel launched ...