I watched a friend almost die today. It was possibly the scariest thing I've ever experienced.
A group of us were mtn biking in central PA. Planning to do a 19 mile ride through some classic rocky PA single track. We meet at the parking lot at around 9AM and finally get moving around 9:45. The first section of the trail is about a mile long and ends at a gravel road. We stopped to regroup and just as we were getting ready to start moving again, one of us is walking his bike up towards the front, goes rigid and collapses to the ground. At first we thought he has just messed up getting clipped into his pedals (happens to all of us...). We quickly realized this was no joke.
He was having a heart attack.
Cell coverage in the hills of central PA is notoriously sketchy. But fortunately, by luck a few of us could get through to 911 while a the rest of us tried to figure out what was going on and what to do. At first, it looked like he was having a seizure, but when his lips started turning blue and we had trouble finding a pulse, one of the guys with reasonably recent training started compressions. This seemed to work and we soon realized we had to keep the compressions going until the EMTs arrived as when it seemed like he was pulling out of it and we stopped, he started going blue again.
After a few minutes that felt like forever, the first EMT arrived - the fire chief. Who basically told us to keep doing what we were doing until additional help arrived, which was a few minutes later. Another EMT in a emergency truck and a volunteer on his motorcycle. They took over and had a defibrillator which started to get him stabilized. Then more arrived - fire truck and an ambulance. With additional, more trained people there, they eventually got him stable enough to load into the ambulance. While this was happening, we saw a medivac chopper from Hershey fly overhead to meet the ambulance at a landing area near by.
One of us called his wife after the EMTs asked about any medications. He is apparently on blood pressure meds and none of us knew what it was. The ambulance crew got him stable enough to load into the chopper and a few minutes later we saw it fly again over us towards the hospital. After a bit of clean up and some help from a State Trooper to get his bike back to our cars, it was all over.
A few minutes later while we were collecting ourselves back at the cars, the fire chief pulled up next to him. He told us we was awake and alert before the loaded him into the chopper and our efforts until help arrived saved his life. He said basically what happened was the electrical signal to his heart got disrupted somehow and that is what caused the cardiac arrest.
We were incredibly fortunate the heart attack happened where it did. There are sections of the trails where getting him out would have been very difficult. As it was were about a mile from the main road and maybe 5 miles or so from the town that sent the response team. It could have been so, so much worse.
So, this was a long and frightening story that basically says my CPR training is woefully out of date. My training was back in the time when you did mouth-to-mouth. Apparently, you don't do that now - just continuous compressions. But whatever the correct procedure is, I need a refresher course.