Is this an alarm that we should swim more to strengthen our hearts? Though similar tragedies happened to swimmers in the past, too, I believe. Seems all are in their late 50's?
News from
www.newsday.com/.../ny-nyrun0312133574nov03,0,6679842.story
Marathon runner dies after collapsing at finish line
BY DANIEL EDWARD ROSEN9:32 PM EST, November 2, 2008
A 58-year-old runner who had just finished the New York Marathon Sunday collapsed at the finish line after going into cardiac arrest and later died at a local hospital, police said.
Carlos Jose Gomes, of Sao Paolo, Brazil, was pronounced dead at Lenox Hill Hospital at about 5:20 p.m., police said. He had fallen ill after he crossed the finish line of the 26.2 mile race near the intersection of 81st Street and Central Park West.
Two other people suffered cardiac arrest Sunday while running in the race, police said.
A 59-year-old man collapsed in the middle of the Queensboro Bridge, police said. A fellow runner stopped and administered CPR until two emergency medical technicians arrived.
The runner was taken to New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, where he was listed as critical but stable, according to one of the EMTs.
Jean-Louis Maubaret, 59, a French national, was running alongside his wife across the Queensboro Bridge between the 15th and 16th mile of the race when he collapsed, unconscious and not breathing, according to EMT Salvatore Sangeniti.
Sangeniti, 47, of the New York Fire Department EMS Division 4, was crossing the bridge from the Manhattan side when he and his partner, Amanda Wong, received a radio call about the runner. They reached the middle of the bridge to find another runner performing CPR.
Sangeniti, of Centereach, said he placed a defibrillator on Maubaret's chest. After one shock, he said, the runner regained consciousness and resumed breathing.
The runner who performed CPR returned to the race once he saw that Maubaret had regained consciousness, Sangeniti said.
Another marathoner suffered cardiac arrest on East 107th Street yesterday afternoon. The man, whose name was not immediately known, had collapsed and was not breathing, according to an FDNY spokesman. EMTs performed CPR as he was rushed by ambulance to Mount Sinai Medical Center.
Hi, Rich. Thanks for the nice words. I originally stumbled upon nitroglycerine patches as a possible treatment of tennis elbow, but I didn't actually try these (winter layoff followed by spring racquet change seemed to cure the problem). At the ACSM conferences last summer, some docs told me they do use these for shoulders sometimes, too. I came across the following citation:
Justin A. Paolini, MBBS, PhD, et al. Topical Glyceryl Trinitrate Application in the Treatment of Chronic Supraspinatus Tendinopathy. In The American Journal of Sports
Medicine. June 2005. Vol. 33. No. 6. Pp. 806-813.
I don't know how effective these are, but I would imagine most good orthopedic docs--especially those with swimming backgrounds--would know. Tom--Jaegermeister--is a very knowledgable doc at Mayo. Tom, if you read this, could you ask some of your colleagues?
If you don't know Rich, I am sure you know the Legend of Rich. I am pretty sure that the Smithsonian and the International Swimming Hall of Fame have already begun bickering about which institution gets first dibs on his body when, in 60 or 70 years, he finally passes on to the next world. In any event, we need to do everything in our capacities to keep Mr. Abrahams in full sprinting inspirational mode for as long as possible!
He is, if anything, to our nation what Ian Smith is to Canada!
And that, my good doctor friend, is saying something!
Hi, Rich. Thanks for the nice words. I originally stumbled upon nitroglycerine patches as a possible treatment of tennis elbow, but I didn't actually try these (winter layoff followed by spring racquet change seemed to cure the problem). At the ACSM conferences last summer, some docs told me they do use these for shoulders sometimes, too. I came across the following citation:
Justin A. Paolini, MBBS, PhD, et al. Topical Glyceryl Trinitrate Application in the Treatment of Chronic Supraspinatus Tendinopathy. In The American Journal of Sports
Medicine. June 2005. Vol. 33. No. 6. Pp. 806-813.
I don't know how effective these are, but I would imagine most good orthopedic docs--especially those with swimming backgrounds--would know. Tom--Jaegermeister--is a very knowledgable doc at Mayo. Tom, if you read this, could you ask some of your colleagues?
If you don't know Rich, I am sure you know the Legend of Rich. I am pretty sure that the Smithsonian and the International Swimming Hall of Fame have already begun bickering about which institution gets first dibs on his body when, in 60 or 70 years, he finally passes on to the next world. In any event, we need to do everything in our capacities to keep Mr. Abrahams in full sprinting inspirational mode for as long as possible!
He is, if anything, to our nation what Ian Smith is to Canada!
And that, my good doctor friend, is saying something!