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North East families are campaigning for a
national screening programme to cut the number of deaths put down to sudden
death syndrome. Mitya Underwood meets them.
Ann Wilson will never forget the tragic moment she
found her son dead. On January 2, 2004, the mum-of-two witnessed
a sight that no parent should ever have to see.
Walking into her 24-year-old son James's bedroom
to wake him up, she found his lifeless body face down in his bed.
"My mind just went," she recalls. "You can't
take something like that in.
"When I walked in I saw him face down and thought,
'He won't be able to breathe like that'. I shook him but he didn't
respond.
"I thought he might be in a deep sleep. He
was just lying still. His shoulder felt warm. I shouted to my
husband James to come and help.
He felt his pulse and moved him. Jimmy was
blue down one side of his body."
Sadly it is estimated around eight young people
die unexpectedly each week in the UK. Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS) is
an umbrella term used for the many different causes of cardiac arrest in
young people.
These can include thickening or abnormal structure
of the heart muscle or irregularities in the electrical impulses, which can
upset the natural rhythm of the heart.
The Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) charity is
currently campaigning to introduce screening for young people as it is
believed more than two thirds of sudden deaths in the young are linked to
hereditary conditions which could be picked up on an electrocardiogram (ECG)
scan.
Defined as an unexpected death occurring as a
result of natural causes, SDS often affects young athletes like James, who
was known as Jimmy.
"Jimmy was very fit and active," his mum says.
"He had no history of heart problems at all. He used to cycle about 40
or 50 miles each week. A couple of days before he was complaining that
he had a chest pain and felt a bit dizzy.
"The doctor said he thought it was probably just
that he was a bit run-down and his height - he was 6ft 6in. His
balance was a bit off. Now I know that can be a symptom.
"I wouldn't want any other parent to go through
what we've been through. I would love to see routine screening
introduced. It could save lives."
Rock music fan Jimmy had his whole life ahead of
him when he died. He had just me a girl his mum says he'd fallen for,
had thrown himself into a computer manager degree at Northumbria University
and was a popular, happy young man.
Christmas - with its emphasis on happy families -
is particularly harrowing for his parents as it reminds them of what they've
lost.
"We make a special effort for the grandchildren
but it'll never be the same again," Ann says. "It's the hardest time
of year for us all. Jimmy was such a nice lad and we will always miss
him. I don't think you ever get over something like this.
"We've kept his ashes in our garden. When
his dad and I die we want to be scattered all together. No parent
should ever lose their child.
"The school where he used to go planted a tree for
him, which is somewhere we can go to remember him."
Ann, 53, and husband James, 50, agreed to be part
of a CRY campaign to stress the importance of screening youngsters.
The couple also have a daughter, Paula, 32, who
has two young children herself and they are petrified the same thing could
happen to the youngsters if they aren't screened. Recently Ann's
10-year-old grandson was complaining of chest pains and the family managed
to persuade doctors to check his heart. Fortunately the results were
normal.
Now the couple are backing CRY's campaign for
routine screening in young, fit children to try and spot potential problems
before they kill. Jimmy's face appears on a promotional postcard
carrying the message 'Eight a week, and each loss is a heartbreak.' It
also features a photo of former cricketer Sir Ian Botham OBE, who is the
charity's honorary president.
The charity also has a number of other well known
faces supporting it. These include Little Britain's David Walliams and
Sir Steve Redgrave CBE.
North Durham MP Kevan Jones is a chairman of the
Parliamentary Group on Sudden Cardiac Risk in the Young, and a big supporter
of CRY.
He got involved after being approached by active
Labour Party member Jeff Morland, whose son Levon died in his sleep on
January 3, 2002. He was only 22.
Twin Levon suffered from rare
Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) disease, which causes heart flutters, but his
dad says they weren't told it could be fatal.
"Levon was diagnosed with Wolff-Parkinson-White
disease when he was 12," says Jeff, a divisional officer for trade union
Unite.
"He didn't seem right. He kept complaining
about fluttering in his chest. We took him to the doctors and at first
they said it was growing pains."
"He was eventually diagnosed with WPW syndrome.
They said it would be a nuisance but nothing more. His twin, Aran,
asked the consultant if it was fatal the last time we were there before he
died. He said not unless he were to jump out an airplane at 20,000ft.
"He was the kind of lad that just got on with it.
He was a travel rep and worked at Camp America and things. He loved
life. We had the Christmas with him and eight months after we were
told his condition was a nuisance, he was dead.
"His mum Sandra went into his bedroom because his
alarm was going off. She found him dead. "That's when the horror
started, it crushed us."
There is an operation which can fix WPW but
Levon's family say they were told it wasn't really worth having as he would
be fine without it.
Since his son's death, Jeff, 53, and wife Sandra,
45, of West Rainton, County Durham, have worked tirelessly to raise
awareness and money for CRY.
So far they have handed over more than £120,000 to
the Surrey-based charity.
With his political connections, Jeff and fellow
campaigner Jack Doyle got MP Kevan Jones on board.
Jeff says: "There is very little awareness
surrounding sudden death and getting information about the condition and
what can be done is essential. In Italy it's the law that professional
athletes must be screened. It should be the same here."
CRY's aim is to introduce a national screening
programme where schoolchildren can be tested for any of the conditions which
may cause their hearts to suddenly stop working.
The lives claimed
Sudden cardiac death is believed to affect as
many as eight young people every week. Sudden cardiac death in those
aged 35 years or less is more common in males than females. Sports
activity in adolescents and young adults is associated with an increased
risk of sudden cardiac death. Sports activity does not appear to be
the cause, but instead the trigger in those athletes who were affected by
cardiovascular conditions predisposing to life-threatening ventricular
arrhythmias during exercise.
There is an increased risk of sudden cardiac
death associated with cocaine abuse.
Causes of sudden adult death include:
Arrhythymogenic Right Ventricular
Cardiomyopathy (ARVC);
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HOCM);
Coronary artery abnormalities, including an
anomalous coronary artery;
Myocarditis:
Dilated Myotonica; Wolff-Parkinson-White
Syndrome, Mitral Valve Prolapse, Aortic Stenosis, Cardiac ion
channelopathies such as Long QT Syndrome, Brugada Syndrome.
These conditions are sometimes also called
Sudden Arrhythmia (or Adult) Death Syndrome - SADS.
Cardiac Risk in the Young provides information
on these conditions, on its website
www.c-r-y.org.uk.
Sporty youngsters stress their hearts the
most. If they have an underlying cardiac abnormality they are more
likely to be at risk.
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