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One in ten people whose hearts were scanned in a
health drive event dedicated to a tragic Birmingham schoolgirl has been
referred for further tests.
Parents Evelyn and John Linforth, whose
16-year-old daughter Alison collapsed and died from Sudden Adult Death
Syndrome, raised thousands of pounds to organise a special testing day in
Longbridge on Saturday.
They revealed a cardiologist sent 10 per cent of
those tested for a more detailed echo-cardiogram test.
Players from the England under-18 rugby squad were
among more than 100 people whose hearts were monitored with ECG and
echo-cardiogram machines at Longbridge Methodist Church, where Alison
worshipped.
Her dad, John, a 48-year-old bank worker, of
Greatstone Road, Northfield, said: "If just one life can be saved by these
tests, it will all be worth it. There are more and more cases of
teenagers and young adults just dropping down dead unexpectedly when the
heart stops like Alison's did.
"But the only way of diagnosing a problem is by
doing random heart tests."
Mum Evelyn, a 49-year-old physiotherapist
assistant at Birmingham Children's Hospital, who was at the event with
24-year-old Gemma, said: "it is emotional because this day is in memory of
Alison and our way of trying to stop other families having to go through
what we did."
The England Youth rugby team doctor Phil Riley was
in Birmingham for a game and brought along players Andrew Forsyth, Christian
Wade, Ollie Hayes and Lee Iniolek. SADS often strikes young people
playing sport.
Alison died on her first day at Cadbury Sixth Form
College, Kings Norton, in September 2003, due to an extremely rare
electrical abnormality within the heart that would only have been identified
by a heart test.
Cardiac Risk in the Young helped organise the day
and anyone interested in sponsoring another heart screening day in Tamworth,
which costs £6,000, should contact CRY's Roy Ball on 0121 681 8189.
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