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Ballinderry
schoolboy Nicholas Collins was just 16 years of age when he suffered from a
fatal viral infection in 1998.
At the time knowledge of
causes of heart diseases among young people was relatively scant. The keen,
fit, basketball player spent seven weeks at the coronary care unit at the City
Hospital, Belfast before passing away on November 24, 1998. Later it was
revealed a viral infection caused his heart muscles to inflame and he suffered
from a fatal haemorrhage.
The first signs Nicholas was
unwell were in October 1998 when he returned home from college one Friday
complaining of a sore throat and flu. He didn’t feel well enough to go to
basketball practice in Lisburn.
Although he was prescribed
antibiotics the doctor later had him admitted to the Lagan Valley Hospital.
From there he was sent to the coronary care unit at the City Hospital where he
was to spend the next seven weeks.
During his time there it was
revealed that a viral infection had caused his heart muscles to inflame. His
temperature and heart rate would fluctuate. Numerous tests were carried out
but as time went by he got weaker and weaker.
At times he seemed to be
improving and his mother even told the owner of a computer shop where he had
applied for a part-time job that he could start work before Christmas. But
Nicholas took a turn for the worse and suffered a fatal haemorrhage and
despite having a blood transfusion passed away.
Brenda feels that her son may
have died sooner, like other high profile more recent cases like Cormac
McAnallen, if he had not been admitted to hospital when he was.
She knows doctors tried their
best during his stay and that his hospital care was excellent. She feels that
potentially life threatening heart conditions among the young can sometimes
not be taken seriously enough.
"A sports teacher once told me
that many young sporty men are very competitive and never want to complain
that they are unwell,” she said.
“It is as though they find it
hard to admit they do not feel well and just keep on going – not to let the
side down.”
Brenda agreed to Nicholas’s
picture being used on the CRY campaign postcards to encourage people to demand
action by raising awareness among the general public as well as within the
medical profession.
“Families are often told that
this is a very rare event and so they think that their case is unique but over
the years a lot of young people have died of these conditions and at least
some of these deaths might have been prevented,” she said.
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