307 Hesta A. MacDonald Lome agreed with that opinion, and the heparin was stopped. Dr. DelMaestro told him that his blood should clot within two hours, and it did, and although Dr. Bonnell relates that he felt weak all that day, there was no more bleeding. Another life-threatening crisis occurred at two o'clock the next morning, when Lome took a severe pain in his chest. Again he sent for the house doctor, who came to his room and told him, "You have angina." Dr. Bonnell told the house doctor unequivocally that he did not have angina, but was having a coronary attack, citing his previous attack ten years before. The house doctor insisted that he had angina, but Dr. Bonnell declared even more forcefully - "I am having a heart attack. I've treated many patients with heart problems, and I know that 1 am having a heart attack." Insisting on his rights, Dr. Bonnell demanded that a heart specialist be brought in from the Royal Victoria Hospital to see him. He followed this demand with a scathing insult, "You doctors here might know a lot about brains and nerves, but you don't know a damn thing about heart trouble." About half an hour later, two heart specialists arrived from the Royal Victoria Hospital. They listened to his chest, did an electrocardiogram (ECG) on his heart, and said, "Yes, you are having a heart attack." They immediately ordered drugs to kill his pain, sending him back to sleep. All he really remembers from that time is that he felt great the next day. However, the cardiologist felt it was in Lome's best interest to transfer him from the Montreal Neurological Institute to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) at the Royal Victoria Hospital. Despite the transfer, Lome's feeling of well being was not to remain for long, as for the third night in a row, he awoke at two o'clock in the morning, this time to find both of his hands badly swollen, as well as his feet and legs. And he could hardly breathe. His respiration was about 40 times a minute, where normally it was twenty.