Sponsored Content

How expert heart care helped one Kentuckian keep going

After heart failure slowed him down, Stanley “Shorty” Carson got back to the work he loves with help from UK HealthCare’s Gill Heart & Vascular Institute.

Sponsored by
LEX_Gill_Shorty_FEB2026

Stanley “Shorty” Carson is back to the work he loves thanks to expert heart care.

Photos provided by Gill Heart & Vascular Institute

At 69, Stanley “Shorty” Carson is still climbing into heavy equipment, hauling machines onto trailers, and doing the kind of work that defined his life long before retirement.

Not long ago, he wasn’t sure he’d be able to keep going.

Heart disease ran in Shorty’s family. His father died of a heart attack at 56, and as Shorty and his four brothers reached that same age, they all felt the weight of it.

In 2024, Shorty’s health took a turn. He became constantly fatigued and swollen as symptoms of congestive heart failure began.

“I was basically drowning in my own fluid,” he said.

That’s when a friend encouraged Shorty to seek care at UK HealthCare’s Gill Heart & Vascular Institute. Though he’d never been treated at a large academic medical center, Shorty decided it was time.

At Gill, heart failure cardiologist Dr. Navin Rajagopalan and his team reassessed Shorty’s treatment and stayed in close contact as he progressed.

When medication alone wasn’t enough, Shorty was admitted to UK’s Albert B. Chandler Hospital with the help of registered nurse Stacy Ford.

While hospitalized, doctors removed more than 50 pounds of excess fluid and addressed an irregular heart rhythm that was making his heart failure worse.

Dr. Kristin Ellison, one of UK HealthCare’s electrophysiologists, then performed a procedure that restored Shorty’s heartbeat.

Since the procedure, Shorty has had “good days and bad days” — but the good ones are winning.

Those walks to his pickup are easier. The work he loves is still part of his life. And his team at UK HealthCare is committed to helping him continue doing the things that bring him joy.

“Fortunately, good people done good things,” Shorty said. “I feel like they’ve put me back where I can finish up what I want to do in life.”

More from LEXtoday
Independent Bookstore Day is your chance to turn the page on your next adventure while supporting local businesses and authors.
From who’s headlining to what their sound can be compared to.
The James Beard finalist is bringing her Sri Lankan-inspired cooking to national television while celebrating 10 years of Tuk Tuk Snack Shop with limited Saturday pop-ups in Lexington.
We dive into horse-related place names around Lexington.
The Lexington Public Library offers free educational resources that citizens can utilize to learn new skills, advance their careers, or just continue to stay curious.
Make the most of good weather by taking your meals al fresco on one of Lexington’s many beautiful patios.
Put your money where your community is and help us create a guide to small businesses by submitting your favorite local spots and sharing this page with a friend.
Talk about a work walk of art.
Discover and document local species as part of a worldwide effort to track biodiversity this spring.
Directly north, east, south, and west of us, cities across the world await.