I heard that he was in critical condition and unable to breathe on his own. I guess that this confirms it.
any symptoms for your prior to the collapse? have you played sports since?Sounds a lot like sudden cardiac arrest. Cause could be coincidental to the hit. Signal from brain to heart interrupted. Not a heart attack. Not any warning. You collapse and turn bright purple No wonder the players were freaked out.. No blood pumping, no respiration. CPR and an AED can get your out of defib if they are quick enough. 6% survival rate. It happened to me playing tennis match 5 years ago. Not a heart attack. A spectator cardiac nurse for CPR and the club’s AED got my heart started again. 3days in the ICU and an SICD implant and I was good to go, My SCA was caused by an electrolyte imbalance. Who knew?
A physician on another site speculated commotio cordis, which were heart stops from blow to heart area right when t-wave is occuring. See it most often with youngsters getting hit with a baseball or hockey puck to the heart. Survival rate depends on speed of defib and getting heart back in rhythm. They seem to have done that quickly with him. 80% survival if done within 2 minutes occording to Korey Stringer Institute.Sounds a lot like sudden cardiac arrest. Cause could be coincidental to the hit. Signal from brain to heart interrupted. Not a heart attack. Not any warning. You collapse and turn bright purple No wonder the players were freaked out.. No blood pumping, no respiration. CPR and an AED can get your out of defib if they are quick enough. 6% survival rate. It happened to me playing tennis match 5 years ago. Not a heart attack. A spectator cardiac nurse for CPR and the club’s AED got my heart started again. 3days in the ICU and an SICD implant and I was good to go, My SCA was caused by an electrolyte imbalance. Who knew?
Damn, I'm glad to hear you were part of that 6%.Sounds a lot like sudden cardiac arrest. Cause could be coincidental to the hit. Signal from brain to heart interrupted. Not a heart attack. Not any warning. You collapse and turn bright purple No wonder the players were freaked out.. No blood pumping, no respiration. CPR and an AED can get your out of defib if they are quick enough. 6% survival rate. It happened to me playing tennis match 5 years ago. Not a heart attack. A spectator cardiac nurse for CPR and the club’s AED got my heart started again. 3days in the ICU and an SICD implant and I was good to go, My SCA was caused by an electrolyte imbalance. Who knew?
Thanks for the info. Glad you’re still with us too by the way, that must have been hell to go through.Sounds a lot like sudden cardiac arrest. Cause could be coincidental to the hit. Signal from brain to heart interrupted. Not a heart attack. Not any warning. You collapse and turn bright purple No wonder the players were freaked out.. No blood pumping, no respiration. CPR and an AED can get your out of defib if they are quick enough. 6% survival rate. It happened to me playing tennis match 5 years ago. Not a heart attack. A spectator cardiac nurse for CPR and the club’s AED got my heart started again. 3days in the ICU and an SICD implant and I was good to go, My SCA was caused by an electrolyte imbalance. Who knew?
This was my thought. Seemed like an urban legend as a kid but its very much real. Rate still but real. I’m by no means a doctor. Just a thought I had.A physician on another site speculated commotio cordis, which were heart stops from blow to heart area right when t-wave is occuring. See it most often with youngsters getting hit with a baseball or hockey puck to the heart. Survival rate depends on speed of defib and getting heart back in rhythm. They seem to have done that quickly with him. 80% survival if done within 2 minutes occording to Korey Stringer Institute.
This is a doctor explaining it.A physician on another site speculated commotio cordis, which were heart stops from blow to heart area right when t-wave is occuring. See it most often with youngsters getting hit with a baseball or hockey puck to the heart. Survival rate depends on speed of defib and getting heart back in rhythm. They seem to have done that quickly with him. 80% survival if done within 2 minutes occording to Korey Stringer Institute.
Thanks. That was informative.This is a doctor explaining it.
No symptoms before. I leaned over to pick up a ball after a point. Out went the lights . 6 weeks and back to tennis. No contact sports though. The implanted SICD (defibrillator) precludes me from that. Might not happen again but odds are increased that it will.any symptoms for your prior to the collapse? have you played sports since?
No pain if you don’t count the sore ribs from the cpr. 3 days in the icu is no fun being strapped down and no food. I felt fine which did not stop them from taking vitals every 2 hours. Implant wasn’t too bad. Released 15 hours after implant surgery. I bet Hamlin has a quick recovery but his football days are probably over.Thanks for the info. Glad you’re still with us too by the way, that must have been hell to go through.
For those that don’t know, this has been shown to be complete misinformationThis video explains what is happening all over the sports world.