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A
mother whose only teenage son died of an undetected heart condition today
backed a campaign calling for all youngsters at risk to be screened.
Auxiliary
nurse Benita Davies’s 16-year-old son Paul died suddenly five years ago
after falling off his bicycle in Earls High School in Halesowen.
Now
her 23 year old daughter Nicola has been found to be suffering from the
same heart condition after she underwent screening.
The
condition, known as ARVC – arrhythmogenic right ventricular
cardiomyopathy involves fatty tissue replacing heart muscle which in turn
stops the heart from beating properly.
Nicola,
who collapsed 4 weeks is now waiting to see if she needs heart surgery to
have a special defibrillator fitted.
“When
Paul died we were told he could have been treated if his condition had
been known,” said Benita, 48, who lives in Halesowen.
“We
had no idea at all that he had this condition.
Paul was a normal, active teenager who was in the cadets and wanted
to join the RAF.
“But
out of 14 members of my family who have been screened since, seven are
suspect.”
When
Nicola first collapsed while on holiday in Majorca months after her
brother’s death, her consultant said screening was not necessary.
It
was then that Benita turned to the charity CRY – Cardiac Risk in the
Young.
CRY
member Roy Ball from Harborne has been campaigning for years since his
16-year-old son Andrew collapsed while playing football in 1980.
Benita
is now urging people to write to their MP to support the Cardiac Risk in
the Young (Screening) Bill.
If
the Bill becomes law it will mean mandatory screening for high risk
children.
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