Man survives 40 hours without a heartbeat, walks out of hospital in rare medical miracle
Imagine your heart stopping. Not for seconds. Not for minutes. But for more than 40 hours. No independent heartbeat. Nothing. Just machines keeping you alive while a team of doctors races against time to figure out how to bring you back. That's exactly what happened to a man in his 40s in eastern China, and against odds that should've been impossible, his heart started beating again.
The story, first reported by the South China Morning Post, reads like something out of a medical thriller.
The man walked into the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine complaining of chest tightness and breathing difficulties. But then things went terribly wrong. He went into sudden cardiac and respiratory arrest. His heart stopped. His lungs stopped working. The normal rhythms that keep you alive just... quit.
Doctors tried everything they knew to restart his heart. Defibrillation. Once. Twice. Multiple times. Nothing worked. The electrical shocks that usually jolt a heart back into rhythm did nothing. His heart wasn't responding.
Patrick Muldoon's cause of death revealed to be myocardial infarction
But these doctors didn't give up. They put him on ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. It's basically the most advanced life support system modern medicine has. Imagine if your heart and lungs could be replaced by a machine. That's what ECMO does. It takes blood out of your body, removes carbon dioxide from it, adds oxygen to it, and pumps it back in.
They also connected him to an intra-aortic balloon pump, another device designed to improve blood flow and take pressure off the failing heart. For nearly two days, that's all he was. A body attached to machines. No independent heartbeat. No life signs other than the numbers on the monitors.
And then it happened. After more than 40 hours of mechanical support, his cardiac function started returning. His heartbeat normalized. About three weeks after being rushed into emergency care, he walked out of that hospital on his own two feet.
Doctors diagnosed him with fulminant myocarditis—a rare and serious inflammation of the heart muscle that can destroy your heart in hours. The condition can trigger heart failure, dangerous arrhythmias, and cardiac arrest so fast that there's often no time to do anything about it. But in this case, the rapid intervention, the advanced technology, and maybe some luck, actually saved his life.
The story, first reported by the South China Morning Post, reads like something out of a medical thriller.
The man walked into the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine complaining of chest tightness and breathing difficulties. But then things went terribly wrong. He went into sudden cardiac and respiratory arrest. His heart stopped. His lungs stopped working. The normal rhythms that keep you alive just... quit.
Doctors tried everything they knew to restart his heart. Defibrillation. Once. Twice. Multiple times. Nothing worked. The electrical shocks that usually jolt a heart back into rhythm did nothing. His heart wasn't responding.
But these doctors didn't give up. They put him on ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. It's basically the most advanced life support system modern medicine has. Imagine if your heart and lungs could be replaced by a machine. That's what ECMO does. It takes blood out of your body, removes carbon dioxide from it, adds oxygen to it, and pumps it back in.
They also connected him to an intra-aortic balloon pump, another device designed to improve blood flow and take pressure off the failing heart. For nearly two days, that's all he was. A body attached to machines. No independent heartbeat. No life signs other than the numbers on the monitors.
And then it happened. After more than 40 hours of mechanical support, his cardiac function started returning. His heartbeat normalized. About three weeks after being rushed into emergency care, he walked out of that hospital on his own two feet.
Doctors diagnosed him with fulminant myocarditis—a rare and serious inflammation of the heart muscle that can destroy your heart in hours. The condition can trigger heart failure, dangerous arrhythmias, and cardiac arrest so fast that there's often no time to do anything about it. But in this case, the rapid intervention, the advanced technology, and maybe some luck, actually saved his life.
Top Comment
D
Debabrata Banerjee
1 day ago
Till how long was the lungs stopped and could not supply O2 to the brain ?Read allPost comment
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