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It is one of those moments you never forget.
A Tuesday night training session, the floodlights sparkling with a faint
trickle of drizzle. Muddy. Another 20 minutes and we'd be inside
for a nice warm shower, assuming someone had remembered to turn the heater
on. Call for a pass from the man inside, but he takes the contact
instead and goes down. And never gets up. Ever.
Howard English was the first person of my age that
I knew to die from a heart attack. It's a long time ago now, but the
images of bewilderment amount everyone on the pitch and the frantic calling
for an ambulance are still etched on al our minds. Of course people
die from heart attacks, but surely not young, fit athletic sportsmen.
Not out of the blue like that.
Well they do. That's the trouble. Even
teenagers fall victim to sudden arrhythmia death syndrome (SADS), as it's
called, which is why the announcement tomorrow that the electronics giant,
Philips, are going to pump 1 million (euros) (£670,000) into funding the
screening of 1,500 potentially elite athletes is to be welcomed as one piece
of sporting sponsorship of genuine long-term value.
In the aftermath of Howard's death, a lot of us
wanted to find out more about what had happened. They symptoms of
heart conditions can be very deceptive, especially to individuals who are
used to pushing themselves to the limit. It's quite easy to relate
chest pains to over-exertion, or just having an off-day, when in fact it's
the body flashing a warning sign. In Italy, such screening is
mandatory for all young sportsmen and women, whereas, often for reasons of
cost, it's not in this country,.
Exercise, perhaps rather alarmingly, is associated
with a tenfold increase in the incidence of heart problems, and yet a
straightforward scan, and then proper examination of the data, can highlight
the symptoms that, if left unmanaged, can lead to the sudden death of
apparently supremely healthy young athletes.
The charity, Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY),
estimate that up to one in every 160 young people are at risk of carrying
one of the conditions that can lead to heart problems, and their 'Save Our
Athletes' campaign, led by Professor Greg Whyte of John Moores University in
Liverpool, will ensure that in the run-up to the 2012 Olympics, as many
leading competitors as possible can be screened.
"The next five years will be seminal to our
understanding of which people are most vulnerable to sudden death during
exercise," he said.
At tomorrow's launch, spearheaded by Sir Ian
Botham, three Olympians - Rob Hayles, the cyclist, and swimmers Karen
Pickering and Mark Foster - will be among the first to undergo the screening
process.
It's not scaremongering. It's not suggesting
that our teams for 2012 are going to be decimated by a plague of cardiac
arrests.
It's just that in a world where thousandths of a
second make the difference between being first and being nowhere, and 'no
pain no gain' is the mantra for all those taking part, it's probably quite a
good idea to understand every inch of your body, and the lengths to which it
can, and cannot go.
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