redrover
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I'm bookmarking that web site and going to look up something I haven't had much success with yet.MoonWrasse:
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I'm bookmarking that web site and going to look up something I haven't had much success with yet.MoonWrasse:
Why is that? Heart attacks - the sudden death kind - are equal opportunity killers, just about as likely to hit you in your easy chair or asleep in your bed as during your daily workout.triton94949:Hard to imagine a heart attack at a pool
And the young and not so young as well as the fit and not so fit can all suffer from them.Rick Murchison:Why is that? Heart attacks - the sudden death kind - are equal opportunity killers, just about as likely to hit you in your easy chair or asleep in your bed as during your daily workout.
In fact, the only 38 year old heart attack victim I know personally was a friend of mine who got up from watching TV to answer the door and just dropped dead.
Rick
Yup. Not counting children with congenital problems, the youngest heart attack patient I've personally treated was a VERY fit 31 year old man. He had a 99% complete blockage of his Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery - that's the main one that supplies blood (and O2) to most of the heart muscle. Because of early access to the 911 system as well as Heart Catheterization technology available these days, he walked out of the hospital 2 days later to continue with his life! Unlike a similar patient I had ~ 16 years ago... a 34 year old man who died because at the time, the only definitive treatment available was bypass surgery and he couldn't live long enough to get to the O.R.MoonWrasse:And the young and not so young as well as the fit and not so fit can all suffer from them.
Up, the ladder, that was meSnowbear:Yup. Not counting children with congenital problems, the youngest heart attack patient I've personally treated was a VERY fit 31 year old man. He had a 99% complete blockage of his Left Anterior Descending Coronary Artery - that's the main one that supplies blood (and O2) to most of the heart muscle. Because of early access to the 911 system as well as Heart Catheterization technology available these days, he walked out of the hospital 2 days later to continue with his life! Unlike a similar patient I had ~ 16 years ago... a 34 year old man who died because at the time, the only definitive treatment available was bypass surgery and he couldn't live long enough to get to the O.R.
If the cardiac event happens to a person when they're under water (or as someone said, up a ladder) the main readon they do not usually survive is they cannot get to definitive care soon enough. Time = Tissue..... the longer you wait, the longer tissue (brain, heart muscle, whatever) is without oxygen, the more of it dies.
Rick Murchison:Why is that? Heart attacks - the sudden death kind - are equal opportunity killers, just about as likely to hit you in your easy chair or asleep in your bed as during your daily workout.
In fact, the only 38 year old heart attack victim I know personally was a friend of mine who got up from watching TV to answer the door and just dropped dead.
Rick