2023年4月19日 星期三

After a rare form of cardiac arrest, NFL player Damar Hamlin is cleared to play again

Plus more health news |

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
  
If you or a loved one plays contact sports, you should be aware of commotio cordis
By Jeffrey Kluger
Editor-at-Large

The hit to the chest Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin took during the first quarter of the team’s Jan. 2 game against the Cincinnati Bengals was routine. The result wasn’t. Hamlin dropped to the turf with a cardiac arrest, and his life was saved only by the timely intervention of team doctors who administered CPR and applied an electronic defibrillator. Hamlin spent more than a week hospitalized before fully recovering and being sent home in good health.

Yesterday, Hamlin announced at a press conference that the team had cleared him medically and he intends to return to playing football in the upcoming season. The question that had not been answered between January and yesterday was just what had caused Hamlin’s cardiac arrest, but the answer finally came at the press conference: an exceedingly rare condition known as commotio cordis that is caused by a blow to the chest at a precise moment in the heart’s cycle—and not by any underlying heart condition. Here’s what you need to know about the incident:

  • Commotio cordis is the result of a blunt force blow when the cardiac muscle has completed a contraction and its electrical signals are undergoing what cardiologists call "repolarization." Says Dr. Lawrence Phillips, medical director of outpatient cardiology at NYU Langone Health: “Each muscle cell is electrically charged, then that charge gets released and it has to reset. That’s repolarization.”
  • Anyone can suffer a case of commotio cordis, regardless of heart health. And doing so requires colossally bad luck: repolarization takes place in just 40 milliseconds or so. Still, there are 30 or so commotio cordis cases in the U.S. each year, often in boys and young men playing sports in which a hard object like a baseball or lacrosse ball strikes the chest.
  • Adults are less likely to suffer commotio cordis because the rib cage and sternum thicken with age, providing greater protection to the heart. What’s more, Hamlin was wearing football’s standard shoulder pads, which partially protect the chest. Still, the violence of the hit—also a standard part of an NFL game—was enough to overcome that protection.
  • Hamlin is unlikely to be at a risk of another commotio cordis incident. “Commotio cordis is a rare event and is related to trauma to the chest at a very specific moment in the heart’s cycle,” says Phillips. “A person should not be at an increased risk of it occurring again.” Hamlin is betting his career—and his very life and health—on that fact.

READ MORE

 
Share This Story
What Else to Read
Milder Autism Is Rising Far Faster Than the More Severe Type, Study Says
By Mike Stobbe/AP
A new study shows the rate of "profound" autism is rising, but not as quickly as milder autism.
Read More »
Democratic States Are Stockpiling Abortion Pills to Preserve Access
By Alice Park
While mifepristone's legal status is worked out in the courts, some states are taking steps to maintain access.
Read More »
Meet the Couple Leading the Push to Legalize Same-Sex Marriage in India
By Astha Rajvanshi
TIME speaks to the lead petitioners in a Supreme Court case that could be a historic win for LGBTQ+ people.
Read More »
The Daily Habits of Happiness Experts
By Angela Haupt
Stop trying to force that frown upside down. Instead, try the joy-building tips experts really use.
Read More »
7 Myths About Kidney Cancer, Debunked
By Katherine Hobson
A lot of what you think you know just isn't so. Here's the truth.
Read More »
How to Get Healthier Dopamine Highs
By Matt Fuchs
Humans aren't big fans of the status quo. We yearn for new experiences and rewards, whether by seeking a new meal, job, or creative project.
Read More »
ONE MORE STORY
A Goodbye to a Beautiful Heart

For many transplant patients, getting a new organ isn’t the end of their medical journey—it’s the beginning of a whole new one. In an essay for the New York Times, Amy Silverstein writes about the health issues that transplant patients are, as an unwritten rule, expected to endure without complaint.

Read More »

If you were forwarded this and want to sign up to receive it daily, click here.

Today's newsletter was written by Jeffrey Kluger and Jamie Ducharme and edited by Elijah Wolfson.

 
 
 
 
 
 

沒有留言:

張貼留言