Damar Hamlin は激しい打撃を受けた後に心停止を起こし、フィールドで CPR が必要になりました。 NFL とフットボールのビデオ: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrdpldKEF234DpxS6fOr9becIHtz7ibPt MY MUSIC: Epidemic Sound – このリンクからサインアップして、30 日間の無料トライアルをお試しください! https://www.epidemicsound.com/referral/2m1bb5/ Twitter でフォローしてください! https://twitter.com/briansuttererMD 私は医師であり、スポーツ ファンでもあります。このチャンネルは、NBA、MLB、NFL、UFC など、スポーツ界のユニークな医学的側面を探求することに専念しています。 最大の「もしも」、歴史的な怪我や物語を分析し、すべてのスポーツファンにとって楽しく関連性のある医学についての学習を行います! 解剖画像: https://www.biodigital.com 免責事項: コンテンツは医学的アドバイスとして解釈されることを意図していません。 意見は私自身のものであり、私の雇用主の意見を代表するものではありません。 私は、このビデオで議論されている個人を個人的に扱ったり評価したりしていません。 フェアユース ガイドライン内で教育的および変革的な目的で使用されるコンテンツ Brian Sutterer LLC 2023 が所有および制作するコンテンツ

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20 Comments

  1. Your eager willingness to "diagnose" Commotio Cordis for Hamlin's tragedy while immediately discounting out of hand any potential link to vaccine injury is typical pro-vax bias. In reality, Commotio Cordis is extremely rare and requires specific elements including pre-existing conditions in the patient. Cardiac injury with the mRNA vaccines, on the other hand, is becoming frighteningly common.

  2. I hate hearing people say the hit had to happen at just the "right" time. I know they just mean precise moment but please don't say it was the "right" time for it.

  3. Dr. Sutterer did not show any proof that this could not have happened because of the covid vaccine.

  4. My 16y/o nephew died of this on his high school's softball field after being struck in the chest with a softball during PE. More schools & sports teams should know the risk and have AEDs on standby. Luckily the NFL had an AEDs on hand just in case.

  5. As an anesthesiologist I can attest to the accuracy of this diagnosis. Commotio cordis is crazy rare, about 1 in 100,000. It’s the timing of the blow in the cardiac cycle and having a difibrillator available and using it ASAP is the key to survival. We had a 10yo girl brought in to our trauma unit some years ago who got popped in the chest with a tennis ball. Despite prompt CPR there wasn’t a defibrillator available and she subsequently died of brain anoxia.

  6. Stop covering for the NFL & the government!!!! It was the Clot Shot!!!! STOP discounting the fact that the jab was a factor. You need to film an updated video and stop gaslighting the Public!!! Damar Hamlin indeed took one of the COVID-19 vaccines, then subclinical vaccine-induced myocarditis must be considered in the differential diagnosis.

  7. Video came out "15 hours ago" according to YT. It is now 1:38PM ET. Please confirm so we can have a time-stamp for this vid. Seems suspiciously fast.

  8. A big reason catchers/home plate umpires now wear chest protectors in addition to helmets in baseball/softball. When I think of how many times this could have been me as a child…

  9. Depending on his ETC02, their revival efforts may have been in vain as far as hopes of return of consciousness and motor function are concerned. Hoping for the best for this young man. Prayers being frequently made for his full recovery.

  10. @Brian Sutterer MD: Please show me one case of commotio cordis in a football player over the age of 20 weighing 200 pounds or more and wearing chest protection. Your off hand dismissal of vaccines is disingenuous. You don't have ekg, chest xray, CT/MRI or blood work results to rule out peri- or myocarditis. At least be honest and go over the stats for CC and at least discuss the possibility of vaccine induced myocarditis– we know that is happening with much higher frequency than commotio cordis– over 1600 athletes have collapsed on their field in the past two years or so since the vaccine was released, over 1400 of them dying from "cardiac events". Is it all from the vaccine? We don't know because most of the time it is swept under the rug and a proper autopsy isn't done. But we do have autopsy evidence from studies of young people who "died suddenly" showing histopathological evidence of vaccine induced myocarditis.

    Anyway, here are some stats:

    "The impact energy must be sufficient to cause ventricular depolarization, estimated to be about 50 joules. This is easily achieved by a thrown baseball, for example, and the risk for commotio cordis appears to peak around 40 miles per hour. At higher speeds (with more energy), there is more likely to be resultant structural damage to the heart and/or chest wall rather than isolated ventricular fibrillation.[6] Smaller balls also carry a higher risk for commotio cordis, likely due to the impact being concentrated on a smaller surface area."

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK526014/

    >Mean age of commotio cordis sufferers is 15.
    >There are very few cases over age 20

    Why younger athletes? Because they're simply not as well developed as adults and have a thinner chest wall that offers less protection against the force that can cause this.

    >It occurs almost exclusively in sports with a fast moving projectile and little to no chest protection. Small object + high speed = concentrated force.
    >He is 6'1" and 200 pounds, and had chest protection on.
    >It is exceedingly rare because you need the right hit in the right spot at the right time (within a 160 millisecond window during cardiac repolarization.
    >If someone can find me just one other case in a football player, I'll be slightly less skeptical.
    >1,616 athletes have collapsed on their field of play in the past 2 years, over 1400 of them dying from "cardiac events", without being hit in the chest.

    So was it CC in this case? It's not impossible, but statistically unlikely. But maybe it will bring attention to the over 1600 athletes who have collapsed in the last two years without being hit in the chest.

  11. So, by watching a video of the game, you can make an accurate diagnosis without viewing the patient or performing any tests? Why do tests at all if you doctors can just watch videos?

  12. When I saw that play my first thought was his collapse was linked to that hit, torn aorta or electrical disruption, but all these doctors coming out saying "it's not vaccine related" has me considering that hypothesis now.
    Thanks Doc.

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