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When the Heart Stops Beating

Survivors tell their stories of sudden cardiac arrest

By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter


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MONDAY, Jan. 5 (HealthDay News) -- Deanna Babcock's heart stopped beating on July 20, 2007. Just like that.

"I was swimming in a pool at North Carolina State University, doing normal laps," recalled Babcock, who was 23 years old and in excellent health, or so she thought. "My strokes started getting sloppy, and I coasted to a stop face down."

Text Continues Below



Jim Stoltz's heart stopped on July 1, 2006. "I was sitting at my desk," said Stoltz, 66, who is an accountant who lives in Flanders, N.J. "I don't recall much. I simply went under my desk. I woke up five days later in the hospital."

Both Babcock and Stoltz were victims of sudden cardiac arrest, in which the electrical system that controls the heart's beating simply stops working the way it should. It is a condition that causes more deaths in the United States than breast cancer and lung cancer combined. An estimated 95 percent of those who experience it die before reaching a hospital.

These story endings were better, mostly because people who saw what was happening knew what to do. "They told me that co-workers standing by and two others immediately started CPR [cardiopulmonary resuscitation]," Stoltz said. "It's a combination of chest compression and breathing. They did it for about 10 minutes, until the emergency medical service arrived."

"They used a defibrillator on me," Babcock said, referring to a device available in some public places that delivers an electrical jolt to start the heart beating again. "A lifeguard did it."

Stoltz is back at work now, feeling "pretty good, almost back to the level of exercise I was doing prior to that."

Babcock's story is less happy "When I had some trouble with circulation to the outer extremities, they had to amputate my left leg above the knee." She now is an associate in the university's science department, doing research on adult education.

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Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 1/5/2009

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What can you do to prevent heart disease? Prevention details here.





SOURCES: Deanna Babcock, Raleigh, N.C.; Jim Stoltz, Flanders, N.J., Fritz A. Ehlert, M.D., associate clinical professor, medicine, and director, electrophysiology fellowship, Columbia University, New York City


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