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There follows
a letter from the parents of Alessandro Testardi, who died in 2003, which
encouraged me to run for CRY in the 2004 London Marathon.

Alessandro Testardi
was born in Rome on 4th February 1987. Throughout his
early childhood he enjoyed swimming, and at the age of 6 and ½ he joined
the “Monterotondo” football club near Rome. During this time he
managed to combine successfully his studies and love for football, and
apart from the usual growth sicknesses typical of a boy of this age (e.g.
chickenpox.) his health was good.
At the age of 14,
during a routine health check he was diagnosed with a light cardiac
arrhythmia. Since then his health was continuously monitored by a
team of doctors at the “Paediatric Hospital, Medicina Sportiva Bambino
Gesu" in Rome.
Following the ECG and
various tests, Alessandro was diagnosed with an “aritmia ipercinetica”
which would disappear under stress when his heart beat reached 120.
Alessandro’s heart, under physical stress, was performing in a perfect
manner, with maximum heart rate of 161, and 45 at rest. He was a
true athlete, who played the right back position in his football team and
was also much admired for his ability to run.
His medical condition
was not causing problems, and soon many Italian football clubs of the 1st
and 2nd Division - including Sampdoria, Lazio, Livorno and
Juventus - demonstrated an interests in his abilities.
After 6 tests with
Juventus, he was finally signed, and in June 2003 he would have moved to
Turin to start his football career.
Sadly his dream was
never to become true.
On the 19th
of April 2003, Holy Saturday, while playing football in a federal
tournament, he collapsed on the ground to the despair of his father who
was then watching the match.
A doctor who was also
present tried desperately to resuscitate him.
Alessandro was a
talented athlete, a well liked and much loved young boy, and his funeral
was attended by hundreds of people. The event was also reported in
local and national papers.
Alessandro’s heart was
examined, after his death, by Prof. Gallo Anatomo-Patologo of the
University of Rome and subsequently by a team of researchers of the
University of Padova, who are studying the reasons for the sudden death in
young people.
It emerged, after a
thorough investigation, that Alessandro had contracted a virus 2 weeks
before he died and the final diagnosis was Miocardite Fulminate.
Con
stima ed affetto Pasquale Maria Pia e Francesca Testardi
Alessandro’s parent
wishes to thank the support that CRY gives to families who like them have
experienced a loss, and the effort that CRY is making in promoting
research to prevent similar deaths in young people.
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