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When Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed during a football game Monday night after suffering a cardiac arrest, Heather O’Donnell said it confirmed her greatest fear.
“It was like watching my worst nightmare,” said Heather O’Donnell, whose 10-year-old son, Jack, plays hockey in Virginia. “He could get hit in the wrong place. Something could happen. No sport is 100% safe.”
About 60 million kids in the U.S. participate in organized sports, and cardiac arrest is the leading cause of death among young athletes.
Dr. Korin Hudson, a MedStar Health emergency physician, said what happened to Hamlin can “absolutely” happen to a child.
“It can happen at any time,” said Hudson, who works with teams like the Washington Wizards and Capitals. “[It’s] very rare, but we do know it may happen as frequently as once every five days.”
“Now, there are a lot of athletes in high school and collegiate sports in this country,” Hudson said. “But once every five days is probably more often than we think about.”
Hudson said the best way to be prepared for the potential is to have the training and equipment necessary to respond.
That equipment includes an AED — an automated external defibrillator. If used within the first minute, chances of survival are close to 90%.
Hudson said parents should know where the closest AED is, always have a way to dial 911, ask coaches if they know CPR, and make sure their school or club has an emergency action plan.
“You can learn how to use an AED in less than two minutes,” Hudson said. “Anybody can do these skills.”
The American Heart Association offers online courses teaching CPR and how to use an AED, Hudson said.
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Newswise — Dr. Olujimi A. Ajijola, an associate professor of medicine at the UCLA Cardiac Arrhythmia Center, is available to discuss what parents should know
Amid Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin’s ongoing recovery from a cardiac arrest, parents may wonder how to best protect their kids in youth sports. Dr. Ajijola of the UCLA Cardia Arrythmia Center says to maximize safety, every parent should learn CPR, schedule a physical examination before the season, and ask the league if there are emergency personnel or automated external defibrillator present at games.
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University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences
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Jan. 3, 2023 — What can happen if your brain loses oxygen for an extended period?
During Monday night’s Buffalo Bills vs. Cincinnati Bengals game, NFL fans watched nervously as Bills safety Damar Hamlin lay flat on this back surrounded by medical personnel, teammates, and coaching staff.
Hamlin, 24, had just tackled a Bengals receiver late in the opening quarter when he stood up and immediately collapsed.
The Buffalo Bills, in a statement, said Hamlin had experienced cardiac arrest on the field and is sedated and in critical condition at University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
Cardiac arrest is when there is an electrical malfunction to the heart — which can create an irregular heartbeat– and the heart’s pumping function is compromised, according to Laxmi Mehta, MD, director of preventive cardiology and women’s cardiovascular health at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. When this happens, there is not effective pumping of blood to organs, including the brain and lungs, and severe damage can occur.
Hamlin had his heartbeat restored on the field after nearly 10 minutes of CPR and oxygen via an AED machine, better known as a defibrillator, a medical device that delivers an electrical shock to help your heartbeat return to normal rhythm, according to reports.
Since crucial information of Hamlin’s condition has yet to be released publicly, certain — now widely circulated — details of Hamlin’s injuries can still be deemed “speculation,” Mehta says. Therefore, while Hamlin may have received CPR and oxygen assistance for several minutes, we can’t be certain “he didn’t get adequate [oxygen] flow.”
“The point of doing CPR is you’re doing those chest compressions — you’re forcing the heart to pump. So we would assume he had a circulation of blood flow to the brain. But if people don’t get CPR done in a timely fashion, or if they don’t get effective chest compressions, then yes, there can be a lack of adequate blood flow, lack of oxygen, and can cause some brain damage,” she says.
This phenomenon, called anoxic brain injury, can result in stroke-like effects, including seizures, the inability to move certain body parts, slurred speech, and trouble forming sentences, says Mehta.
Check back for more updates on this story.
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Veteran actor Tabassum, known for her work as a child artiste and also as host of popular Doordarshan talk show “Phool Khile Hain Gulshan Gulshan”, has died after suffering a cardiac arrest, her son Hoshang Govil said on Saturday.
“Few days ago, she was admitted to a hospital. She had gastro problem and we went there for check-up. She suffered two cardiac attacks at 8.40 pm and 8.42 pm. She passed away peacefully on Friday night,” Hoshang told PTI.
As a child artist, Tabassum was known as Baby Tabassum and starred in movies such as “Nargis”, “Mera Suhaag”, “Manjhdhar” and “Bari Behen” in the late 1940s.
She hosted the celebrity talk show “Phool Khile Hain Gulshan Gulshan” from 1972 to 1993 on Doordarshan.
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