Catherine O’Hara dies at age 71
Actress Catherine O’Hara has died at the age of 71, TMZ reported.
Fox – LA
Emmy Award-winning actress Catherine O’Hara died at the age of 71 early Friday morning, January 30, at her home after a “brief illness,” Variety and Deadline reported.
The ‘Home Alone’ and ‘Schitt’s Creek’ star’s cause of death has not been determined. revealed. USA TODAY has reached out to the Los Angeles Medical Examiner’s Office for additional information.
Details surrounding O’Hara’s death have not been released, but the Canadian-born woman previously revealed that she had a rare congenital condition called inverse dextrocardia.
During the interview in 2020 During winemaker Kathryn Hall’s virtual happy hour, O’Hara opened up about inversion syndrome, a genetic disorder in which some organs are positioned upside down in the body. body.
“I’m a weirdo,” she said with a laugh. “I don’t even know your name because I don’t want to know your name.”
What is a reverse sitting position? What is Catherine O’Hara’s type?
According to the Cleveland Clinic, inverted sitting position is a genetic variation in which a person’s thoracic and abdominal organs are on the mirror image side of their normal anatomy.
The Cleveland Clinic says people with the condition, which is caused by a genetic mutation, are usually harmless and can lead normal lives. Most patients with reverse sitting do not realize that they have reverse sitting because the condition has no signs or symptoms that prompt treatment.
O’Hara said she has inversion syndrome, known as dextrocardia, where the heart faces to the right side of the chest and other organs are reversed.
How did Ms. O’Hara know she was sitting in reverse?
O’Hara said she learned about her rare condition years ago when she underwent an electrocardiogram and X-rays during a doctor’s appointment. The comedy legend said her husband Beau Welch was by her side when she found out..
“When the doctor said my heart was on the right side and my organs were turned inside out, my husband immediately said, ‘No, her head is turned backwards.’
O’Hara said that when she learned she had reverse sitting dextrocardia, she tried to learn as little as possible, quipping, “I love Western medicine. I just don’t want anything to do with Western medicine.”
“People will think I’m ignorant for not knowing this, but I don’t want to know, because I didn’t know before,” she said. “I haven’t heard anything about this from anyone else. As we drive home, I wonder what the other brothers are doing if they know where their hearts are.”

