Cyclist Calls 999 While He Is Having A Heart Attack! | Helicopter ER

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 май 2023
  • Subscribe to Quest TV for more great clips: bit.ly/3Womgne
    Dispatch listens in to 999 calls and recognises that a man is about to have a heart attack, despite the patient seeming calm. Time is of the essence as without medical aid, he will surely die.
    🇬🇧 Catch full episodes of your favourite Quest shows on discovery+: bit.ly/41DFZTB
    From Season 9 Episode 7
    Follow Quest on Twitter: / questtv
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 32

  • @ukquesttv
    @ukquesttv  Год назад +1

    Subscribe to Quest TV for more great clips: bit.ly/3Womgne

  • @grimeyx
    @grimeyx Год назад +62

    It's crazy how quickly you can go into arrest when having a heart attack. I took a call for a 20-something year old with chest pain. He was alert but clearly struggling. Said he'd had the pain for about 5 minutes, fit and healthy but he had a previous heart condition (enlarged aorta I think he said). Took him through the call, got an emergency response and gave him the disconnect script. My finger was literally hovering over the disconnect button but something didn't feel right with how he was speaking so I held off on hanging up, then he made a weird grunting noise and I heard him fall to the floor. His partner runs out and screams, picks up the phone and says he's not breathing. Got CPR started, crew arrived within 5 minutes of the arrest, worked on him for 20 minutes, got ROSC and took him straight to hospital which luckily was only a couple minutes down the road. Just think it's mental how you can be speaking to them one second and the next they're clinically dead.

    • @fatherofwar1203
      @fatherofwar1203 Год назад +4

      Watching someone deteriorate so quickly in front of your face is quite something, but christ I couldn't listen to it over the phone so props to you.

    • @Muck-qy2oo
      @Muck-qy2oo 10 месяцев назад +2

      I think what I got 20 years ago might have been somthing like cardiac arrest (vagal induced asystole). It was just so fast that I did not even realize it fully. I was in school when I was 13 years old standing in front of my teacher. I just started to suddenly feel really weird from one second to another and I told the teacher that something was wrong with me. But she said "no, what should be wrong? Everything is fine" and then whithin 10 seconds or something everything started to turn black and it felt like I was swirled into a tornado (like very strong vertigo) and I heard a very loud noise in my ears and I felt like I was in a bad dream or something. The blackness than slowly disappeared and I again saw the face of my teacher shaking me and calling my name and everything felt so unreal like my body wasn't really there and I wasn't really present and I was afraid from what I experienced. It took a day or two if I remember correctly to get the normal body feeling like before and I was fine since.
      The teacher later told me how she experinced the situation because I asked what happened on that day and she said that after telling her that I felt unwell she believed I was acting and than she saw my eyeballs suddenly roll all the way up and my body go limb and falling to the ground hitting the floor with my head unbridled despite her grabbing my arms to hold me at that moment (because she relaized then somethign happend), than she tried to wake me up and shook me several times until my eyes came back and I started talking to her. I didn't perceive anything of these events during my blackout. I think what I experienced as a derealisation was due to the short period that my brain was not getting oxygen and so now I have an idea what they mean about dysfunctions in patients with longer periods with no circulation, being disoriented and not able to really discern anything.
      I never talked about this episode much in my life as it was an experience I don't want to remember and I understand why others don't. Whatever it was it was fast and horryfying because it makes you realize how powerless and insignificant you can become in these unpredictable and sudden events.

  • @iCortex1
    @iCortex1 29 дней назад +2

    This is exactly what happened to my dad, one vessel clogged at ~75% and one almost completely blocked at 98% ... scary stuff, he's fine now thankfully :)

  • @dexedr1ne
    @dexedr1ne 9 месяцев назад +4

    I love these first responders.. what would people in health trouble do without them? All the best to everyone!

  • @Muck-qy2oo
    @Muck-qy2oo 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hands up for the courage of this man dealing with his situation so calmly.

  • @Cathal-OBoyle
    @Cathal-OBoyle Месяц назад +2

    I think if he’s a Doctor he’s aware of how critical his condition is when told he’s having a heart attack lol.

  • @emsservices6090
    @emsservices6090 Месяц назад +1

    anterio septal with 7mm elevation !. No wonder they were getting ready for a resus

  • @zackova6307
    @zackova6307 11 месяцев назад +6

    Was the guy in the start of the video playing OSRS Mobile?

    • @grimeyx
      @grimeyx 11 месяцев назад +2

      i afk'd mlm to 99 while taking 999 calls.

  • @peteranserin3708
    @peteranserin3708 Год назад +10

    He is flirting with disaster.

    • @thedave7760
      @thedave7760 11 месяцев назад +1

      I will bet all his vaccines are up to date.

    • @formatique_arschloch
      @formatique_arschloch 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@thedave7760Yeah imbossible to have a heart attack otherwise, right?

  • @user-wm6bk3in3h
    @user-wm6bk3in3h 7 месяцев назад +1

    i don't get why requires firecrew to transfer

    • @DarioMelkuhn
      @DarioMelkuhn 6 месяцев назад +1

      Standard procedure for helicopters

    • @user-wm6bk3in3h
      @user-wm6bk3in3h 6 месяцев назад

      @@DarioMelkuhn not all helicopters

    • @roberthudson1959
      @roberthudson1959 Месяц назад

      Two possibilities come to mind. The first is that firefighters may have more legal authority to close roads, etc. to make the mission run more smoothly. The second is that there may not be a separate ambulance service in that area. I live near a city where the fire department is also responsible for ambulance services. All of the personnel are certified as paramedics or EMT's, and the closest apparatus responds to a medical emergency. I have seen situations where a fire rig was first on site, and the ambulance arrived just in time to transport the patient.

    • @emsservices6090
      @emsservices6090 Месяц назад

      It isn't a fire crew, its the hospital porters team. You have to have trained fire staff on a helipad when its active, so they 'dual role' for the 5 mins the chopper is there.

    • @emsservices6090
      @emsservices6090 Месяц назад

      @@roberthudson1959 none of what youve said is accurate, at all.

  • @tashag643
    @tashag643 11 месяцев назад

    I’m going today

  • @aleawygggh8246
    @aleawygggh8246 Год назад

    1st

  • @juliusfucik4011
    @juliusfucik4011 Год назад

    💉?

    • @MG-ll5nw
      @MG-ll5nw Год назад

      aye. nobody ever got heart attacks before! Heart attacks is a brand new thing!
      VACCINES BAD! VERY BAD - Trump

    • @joshb92004
      @joshb92004 Год назад +3

      That profile photo of you looks nice. It’s hardly unusual for a guy of his age to be suffering with heart attacks, and even if he was young not every heart attack/cardiac arrest happened before the vaccine

    • @Quattro5478
      @Quattro5478 Год назад

      @@joshb92004 i think most likely just someone having fun by setting their pic to be a clown and then saying things that make them sound like a clown, nothing too serious

  • @SoonerHistory
    @SoonerHistory Год назад

    Looking to gain more subscribera. I have a ton of memorabilia and collectibles I want to share. Thanks.