ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, November 7, 1996             TAG: 9611070041
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL   PAGE: A-3  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: MOSCOW
SOURCE: Associated Press


YELTSIN, RECUPERATING NICELY, RECLAIMS POWERS DOCTOR: HEART AT 100 PERCENT

A day after his quintuple heart bypass, Boris Yeltsin reasserted his tenacious grip on power and demanded a report Wednesday on what went on while he was unconscious.

He nagged doctors to move him out of the Moscow Cardiological Clinic to cozier surroundings.

``I think he's out of the woods,'' American heart surgeon Michael DeBakey said after seeing Yeltsin.

``He couldn't have carried on much longer'' without the surgery and certainly couldn't have served out the second four-year term he fought for so fiercely this summer, DeBakey said in an interview with The Associated Press.

When DeBakey first examined Yeltsin in September, ``he was incapacitated, considerably incapacitated,'' and his heart was working at only 20 percent. After Tuesday's seven-hour operation, ``I'd expect for him to carry out his term perfectly normally.''

Yeltsin's wife told Russia's Public Television that her husband was experiencing some post-surgical pain, but was in much better shape when she visited him Wednesday.

``I found him to be completely different from yesterday. His face was different. He speaks perfectly freely,'' Naina Yeltsin said. ``We are happy about his condition. Today, one wants to smile.''

She said her husband was agitating ``to be out of these walls as soon as possible.''

Doctors were considering moving him to the nearby Kremlin hospital, which has suites of offices and a homier atmosphere. But they cautioned that a variety of complications are possible immediately after a bypass, including bleeding and heart rhythm abnormalities.

The joke making the rounds in the Russian capital was that Yeltsin's first words after coming out of the anesthesia were ``Give me a pen'' - a sly reference to the presidential decrees through which he rules.

It wasn't much of a joke. At 6 a.m. Wednesday, shortly after he was taken off the respirator, that's exactly what happened: Yeltsin signed a decree taking back the powers, including control over the nuclear arsenal, which he has guarded so jealously against a host of challengers.

Yeltsin also sent President Clinton congratulations on his re-election, met with Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and requested a report on the 24 hours he was out of commission, which included a nationwide protest over unpaid wages.

The strike was a sign of the wellspring of nationwide anger over economic woes that Yeltsin will face when he returns to work. Yeltsin has spent mere hours at the Kremlin since winning a second term over Communist challenger Gennady Zyuganov in July and his illness has kept Russia in limbo for months.

The prime minister, who underwent bypass surgery himself eight years ago, said he was amazed that Yeltsin was bouncing back so fast from surgery. Chernomyrdin said he urged him to take it easy for a while.

``We won't overload him,'' an upbeat Chernomyrdin said. ``We'll try to take as much of the burden off him as possible.''

DeBakey said Yeltsin could be ``up and around, walking'' today but still needs six to eight weeks of recuperation before he can go back to work in the Kremlin. Once he does, he'll feel better than ever, DeBakey said.

DeBakey said Yeltsin's heart was functioning at just 40 percent of normal when he went into surgery. Now, after five bypass grafts, it's at 100 percent, he said.


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