Thursday 2 July 2015

Brought back to life after heart stops beating for 40 minutes

An incredible story worth posting here which highlights the importance of new, modern technology in dealing with someone having a heart attack.

From The Daily Telegraph, June 25, 2015

"GRAEME WEBB was clinically dead for more than 40 minutes after suffering a heart attack and going into cardiac arrest in the emergency department at Liverpool Hospital.


Graeme Webb with emergency physician Trudi Davis (right) who led the resuscitation and clinical nurse Kathryn Spears who looked after Graeme's wife Alison during the ordeal. Photo: Jonathan Ng
An emergency staff member performed CPR on the father of two for six minutes until an automatic chest compression device was connected to do it automatically.
This allowed staff the time to transport him to the cardiac catheterisation laboratory for emergency surgery.
While Mr Webb was connected to the LUCAS 2 machine, interventional cardiologist Christian Mussap said a coronary angioplasty was performed and a blocked artery scented.
“We achieved a truly amazing outcome considering the situation,” Dr Mussap said.
“Mr Webb is extremely lucky to be alive.”
The saga began when Mr Webb was driving home to Hammondville from work on March 30. He rang wife Alison and said he wasn’t feeling well.
“I got home, then had this tingling sensation in my mouth,” he said.
“I called an ambulance ... it was 1.19pm on my phone ... I remember looking at the time ... then I called my wife and told her. I remember the ambulance arriving, walking out and hopping in, I remember the ride, but after that, I don’t remember much at all until a few days later.”
Emergency Department Staff Specialist Trudi Davis was part of the team that kept Mr Webb alive and said had it not been for the machine Mr Webb would have sustained a severe brain injury.
“It makes things possible that weren’t before,” Dr Davis said.
“Within seconds after Graeme went into cardiac arrest, a large amount of senior doctors were around him.
“We were continually doing CPR and giving him electric shocks and medication but his heart wouldn’t start.
“He had shown subtle indicators that he would be OK. When you go into cardiac arrest, there are progressing heart rhythms — Mr Webb’s stayed in the first one — which gave him a better chance of survival and less likely to have brain damage.
“As he was being transferred into surgery, we gave his heart one more shock ... it started to beat.”
The machine, which is currently only available in seven NSW hospitals, was removed for the catheter surgery.
“The cardiologist was as shocked as all of us that Mr Webb was awake the next day and speaking,” Dr Davis said.
“We all agree that if it had been another time or another hospital, he’d be dead.”
Dubbed the Miracle Man, Mr Webb said he was embarrassed to carry the title and felt the miracle lay within the hospital.
“The staff at Liverpool — they’re the miracle,” he said.
“The only thing I can say is ‘thank you’.”
After waking up, doctors and staff asked Mr Webb if he suffered chest pains or any other signs of a heart attack.
“It’s like my body was doing me a favour and shutting down so I didn’t experience the heart attack or cardiac arrest ... I have no knowledge of it,” Mr Webb said.
“Afterwards I was upset. I was a wreck. I was like it for a few weeks.”
Mr Webb said it was a real scare, especially for his 19-year-old son Matt and 18-year-old daughter Sarah.
“How they feel, you can’t put into words. That was one of the things. I hated putting them through that,” he said.
“You see how easy it is to be taken from your family and friends. I don’t take things for granted like I used to. It definitely makes you appreciate what you’ve got.
“You don’t expect to have a heart attack. Even when I woke up, I had no idea what had happened or how much time I’d lost.
“I wouldn’t have even know that I had a blocked artery. I’m a typical male, I didn’t go to the doctor as much as I should have.”
Mr Webb celebrated his 52nd birthday two weeks after his experience and said he spent it “very quietly”.
Mr Webb is now looking forward to returning to work as a data manager with Australia Post, a job he has held for more than 30 years.
“When I wake up in the morning now, I feel grateful,” he said.
The $21,000 LUCAS 2 machine which brought him back to life was donated earlier this year by three hospital auxiliaries — Busby, Liverpool Hospital and Moorebank-Chipping Norton.
Hospital general manager Robynne Cooke thanked the auxiliaries for the donation.
“This is a great example of fundraising by our auxiliaries really making a difference to the lives of our patients and to the services we are able to provide,” Ms Cooke said.
“We are extremely grateful for their ongoing generosity and support. It clearly does make a difference.”"

Read the original story using this link:
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/south-west/brought-back-to-life-after-heart-stops-beating-for-40-minutes/story-fngr8hxh-1227411171329

Listen to the story and see this machine in operation in an interview with Graeme Webb. http://www.9jumpin.com.au/show/mornings/videos/4327426121001/

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