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How to recover from a heart attack: running was the perfect medicine for man who had never done sport before – now he does marathons

  • Dhananjay Yellurkar took up running after open heart surgery following a heart attack at 46, induced by stress at work and genetic factors, he says
  • From the treadmill he started running on the streets and has now completed a marathon on six continents – and will run on the seventh in May

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Dhananjay Yellurkar, who suffered a heart attack at 46 and underwent open heart surgery, takes part in the 2018 Antarctic Ice Marathon. Photo: Mark Conlon/Antarctic Ice Marathon

Dhananjay Yellurkar is a poster boy for what a heart patient can achieve.

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He suffered a heart attack at the age of 46 and underwent open heart surgery. Seven months later, he ran in his first half-marathon.

Now, at age 59, Yellurkar is preparing for the Santiago Marathon in Chile, in May, to complete his quest of running a marathon on each of the seven continents.

Over the past 13 years, Yellurkar, the chief risk officer at NIIF Infrastructure Finance in Mumbai, India, has run 12 half-marathons, 10 marathons and an ultramarathon.

Yellurkar trains in Mumbai in 2022. Photo: Dhananjay Yellurkar
Yellurkar trains in Mumbai in 2022. Photo: Dhananjay Yellurkar

He has chronicled his metamorphosis from a struggling patient in the aftermath of his surgery into a passionate long-distance runner in his book, Fuel for My Journey, A Memoir About Running Marathons Post Cardiac Surgery, published in 2022.

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His story is one of tenacity, grit and hope.

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