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A talented hockey player who did not know he had a
heart defect slumped on to his girlfriend and died.
Luke Meekings collapsed after becoming unwell as
he drove along Poulter's Lane in Worthing on June 24.
Tests after his death revealed his heart was
almost three times the normal size and badly damaged because of an
undetected condition.
Now his brother is having to come to terms with
the fact he too has the life-threatening defect.
An inquest at Worthing was told Mr Meekings was
driving with his girlfriend when he felt ill.
He pulled over and slumped on to his girlfriend.
An ambulance took him to Worthing Hospital but the
24-year-old was pronounced dead at 8.56pm.
Mr Meekings was a very active person who loved
sport, went to the gym at least five times a week, ate well and rarely drank
alcohol, the court heard.
In the weeks leading up to his death, Mr Meekings,
of Duncton Road, Rustington, had become breathless and tired but his parents
put it down to him working long hours as a steel erector and renovating his
new house.
Mr Meekings played hockey at county level but had
not been as active in the past year after he broke a bone in his hand.
He also underwent a hernia operation that kept him off work for ten months.
He had also started to take steroids.
Mr Meekings' mother Sue Meekings said her son was
very body and image conscious and had been trying to get back to full
fitness but added that the family were unaware he had taken steroids until
after his death.
West Sussex Coroner Penny Bailey recorded a
verdict of natural causes. The cause of death was sudden adult death
syndrome.
Since his death Mr Meekings' family has been
tested for the same defect.
While his younger brother Thomas, 21, and
accounting and finance university student, is fine, his elder brother Same,
who lives in Beijing and works as an editor for Oxford University Press, has
had the same condition diagnosed.
Mr Meekings' parents Sue and Roger, of Slindon
Common, Arundel, have been in touch with Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY),
which raises awareness of sudden death syndrome in young people, encouraging
them to get tested so they can manage their condition.
Mrs Meekings said: "CRY has been really helpful to
us with getting the family screened.
"Luke played hockey for Chichester and then
Middleton and Bognor. He was a vey good hockey player and there were
some lovely tributes.
"He loved being outside and we held a humanist
funeral for him in our back garden where more than 200 people turned up."
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