914Driver
914Driver MegaDork
4/18/12 5:55 a.m.

The heart of an 11-year-old Little League baseball player started beating again Monday evening moments after he was hit by a pitch and nearly died at home plate.

The boy was batting in a Colonie Little League game at Cook Park when he was struck by a pitch and crumpled to the dirt. The pitch had hit him in the chest and stopped his heart.

A coach and police officer performed CPR before a defibrillator brought the boy back to life. He was recovering Tuesday at Albany Medical Center, police and coaches said.

"This was about everyone working together as a team," said Frank Prevratil, the president of Colonie Little League.

Prevratil, who also was the coach of the other team, was the first to begin CPR.

"There was no panic from anyone, no hysteria," Prevratil said. "Everyone did exactly what they were supposed to do."

Police and Colonie Little League officials declined to release the boy's name.

The boy may have suffered a condition called commotio cordis, which occurs when there is a blow to the heart at precisely the right fraction of a second to disrupt the organ's electric rhythms.

About 65 percent of commotio cordis victims die, though it accounts for only three or four deaths nationally each year, said Peter Berry, deputy chief of the Colonie EMS department.

"In my 23 years in the department, this is the first call for of this specific type of incident that I can recall," Berry said.

The call came into Colonie EMS dispatchers at 6:37 p.m. Monday, seconds after the boy had been hit, Berry said.

The boy's coach, Mike Martin, bolted from the dugout and realized the boy was having trouble breathing, Prevratil said.

Martin declined comment, other than to say the boy was doing well Tuesday.

When Prevratil saw the boy's coach needed further assistance, he rushed from his own dugout. On his way to home plate, he heard someone from the stands shout, "Call 911!"

While Martin and Prevratil tended to the boy, he slipped out of consciousness. That's when Prevratil began CPR.

He performed chest compressions for only about 30 seconds before Colonie police officer Brian Curran arrived on the scene, at 6:42 p.m., Colonie Police Lt. Robert Winn said.

Colonie Police declined to make Curran available for comment.

Curran took over CPR, but it was only two minutes before the EMT team reached the boy with a defibrillator.

His heart restarted while he still was lying in the batter's box, Prevratil said, and he was taken away by ambulance.

By that time, all the other players had been moved to another field, where they couldn't see what was happening at home plate.

"It was amazing to see everyone working so calmly," Prevratil said. "Everyone did what they were trained to do."

The umbrella Little League organization mandates that at least one coach of every team participate in a two-hour safety course, which covers everything from first aid to life-threatening incidents.

"I'm very proud of that training and the way it worked," Prevratil said.

In 2000, commotio cordis was responsible for the death of a 14-year-old lacrosse player from Long Island named Louis Acompora.

His death led to what is now called, "Louis's Law," which mandates all New York State public schools have defibrillators available at sporting events. But the law does not govern recreational leagues.

novaderrik
novaderrik SuperDork
4/18/12 6:09 a.m.

why did they move everyone to a different field while this was going on? seems like it was a very good teachable moment about how easily things can go wrong, and then how they can go right again..

foxtrapper
foxtrapper UberDork
4/18/12 6:56 a.m.

Not a one in a million by any means, I've seen it happen at games before. It's why some of the leagues are instituting chest guards for the kids.

I found it fascinating how dangerous baseball is, especially the pee-wee leagues, when my son was interested in it. Lack of control gets lots of kids hurt, with teeth knocked out and some broken noses. Line drives to the face or chest, fly balls dropping on their upturned faces, grounders popping up through a glove hitting the kid in the face. Dang, there's a lot of blood and tears on the baseball field. And that's with the soft baseballs they use.

Soccer, football, lacross are all less dangerous. I see much less blood tears and injury on those fields.

Strizzo
Strizzo UltraDork
4/18/12 8:03 a.m.
novaderrik wrote: why did they move everyone to a different field while this was going on? seems like it was a very good teachable moment about how easily things can go wrong, and then how they can go right again..

Probably because they didn't want to deal with the aftermath of a buch of little league kids watching one of their friends die

slantvaliant
slantvaliant Dork
4/18/12 9:16 a.m.

So ... how does that count on the pitcher's stats?

4cylndrfury
4cylndrfury UltimaDork
4/18/12 9:37 a.m.

EDIT:

Inflammatory post removed

I love baseball.

foxtrapper
foxtrapper UberDork
4/18/12 9:43 a.m.

4cylndrfury,

Your ability to repeatedly leap to wrong conclusions is quite remarkable.

4cylndrfury
4cylndrfury UltimaDork
4/18/12 9:46 a.m.

as someone who played baseball for over a decade and a half, no, its not

mtn
mtn PowerDork
4/18/12 9:55 a.m.

My older brother played baseball, football (Offensive line) and Lacrosse. Guess where his worst injuries came from? Baseball.

He was playing first base, throw comes in towards home plate, he stretches for it and the runners knee ends up in his temple. Knocked him out cold.

foxtrapper
foxtrapper UberDork
4/18/12 10:09 a.m.
4cylndrfury wrote: as someone who played baseball for over a decade and a half, no, its not

Don't waste our time with self-ritious trolling. You had a fit all by yourself. Fine, you played ball some, so what? Do you really think that means the event never happened? That because you played ball I never saw a kid get smashed in the mouth? Whatever.

You don't like my local league calling it pee-wee, take it up with them.

Appleseed
Appleseed PowerDork
4/18/12 11:53 a.m.

That kid gets one hell of a pass. "Berkeley you, I already died once!"

Fox and Fury, remember: there's NO crying in Baseball.

doc_speeder
doc_speeder Reader
4/18/12 12:01 p.m.

This is cool to me. My wife's business is safety/first aid/defibrillator training and she is a distributor for a really well respected/known AED company. She used to be an EMT and got sick of the shift work. She'll love this story.

4cylndrfury
4cylndrfury UltimaDork
4/18/12 12:13 p.m.

It would appear Im having a bad day. I suppose I took someones comments and read too far into them. My bad. Not trying to troll, just blowing off steam.

F.T. - didnt mean to tell you what you saw or know. Apologies sir...

FWIW, I dont think baseball is any more dangerous than any other sport...Saw a kid get made a vegetable playing goalie in soccer, and a kid end up paralyzed from football... theyre all pretty rough.

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