A Dusen, a dedicated medical staff dedicated to the women’s basketball game, came into action to save the three father of three, Ed Wesolowski, when he suffered a widow-producer Dil attack and fell into the UPMC Cooper Fieldhouse.
Vesolowski’s wife Katie recalled the terrible moment while talking with ABC Pittsburgh affiliated WTAE-TV.
“(I) just grabbed his face, and he was shaking. He was, like, Neela … I felt that he was doing a seizure. But deeply, I think I knew,” he said . “Just remember that to bring them to AED, and I turned and seen, and they were contractioning the chest on it.”
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Ed Wesolowski fell into a Dusen female basketball game in January. Then, Dusen Basketball Medical Staff took action to save Vesolowski’s life.
WTAEE
A widow-producer heart attack is a heart attack that includes the left anterior descending artery, which supplies a large part in front of the heart. It is one of the three important arteries that supply blood to the heart, and it is the most common artery to be a “criminal” in patients with heart attacks. This is a life-threatening situation.
A heart attack occurs when a blood clot is described above, as the arteries of the heart cause obstruction. Risk factors include diabetes, a family history of premature heart disease, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, smoking and “business stress”. Symptoms of a widow-producer heart attack may include chest pain that can be “described like tightness or pressure,” and chest pain that “may radiate the neck, jaw, or shoulder,” According to StatePierl, an online library published in the National Library of Medicine, as well as troublesome, dizziness or stomach upset.
Recalling the moments just before the heart attack, Vesolowski described an unusual sensation before the collapse.
“I remember that a warm, eg, like a feeling of dizziness, and I think (this) surpassed my body. It started, like, was acting in my feet and like a kind. And I remember, it’s strange.
Thankfully, a quick-minded Duxne came to the rescue of the medical team Vesolowski, using a life-sax protocol, but had never had to use before to save his life.
“I think when our trend immediately caught AED (and athletic trainer Traveis Moar) with (and athletic trainer Travis Moyer), and I just … are running there, because we have been trained because we have been trained. To, “Dr. Ryan Nusbam, the team’s physicians, who reportedly demonstrated chest contraction on Vesolowski, told the WTAE-TV. “And you are just focusing on what you have learned through basic life support.”
Moyer said, “Everything went away in such a way that it was believed, the way it was planned. It was a unique position that it was a fan and not an athlete, but the protocol and procedure always always the same It is no, no, who is the patient. “
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Ed Wesolowski fell into a Dusen female basketball game in January. Then, Dusen Basketball Medical Staff took action to save Vesolowski’s life.
WTAEE
Vesolowski expressed deep gratitude for the team’s functions.
He said, “They were ready to recognize the situation and know what to do really to do, and in a very stressful moment, you know … I am grateful to that,” he said.
Last week, Vesolowski and his family returned to the arena, where their lives almost ended. Prior to the game, he met the medical team, which rescued him for the first time.
Duxne honored his training staff that night, and when the applause was loud, nothing could happen that the Vesolowski family said they feel that they feel.
“I mean, because if it was not for (for them), and if all those things (not) come together at the right time, then you know, it can be a different story – but they were they were Ready to go, “Vesolowski said.