Manchester Evening News

I’m lucky to be alive, my doctor didn’t think I would make it...

- By PAIGE OLDFIELD

A MAN who had to be rescued from a mountainsi­de after he caught hypothermi­a has told how his heart stopped beating – for THREE HOURS.

Tommy Price became unwell while fell running in the Lake District with a friend on January 6.

The 27-year-old had just started ascending Blencathra mountain in freezing conditions when he suddenly felt ‘delirious.’

As his body temperatur­e began to plummet, Tommy went into cardiac arrest. With both their phone batteries drained, his friend, Max, was forced to leave him on the mountainsi­de so he could go and find help at the bottom of the slope.

“I can’t remember anything from the run,” Tommy said. “I tried to stand up and fell 10 metres, it was blizzard conditions so I couldn’t see anything.

“It took one hour and 15 minutes for the mountain rescue team to reach me. They found me lying there lifeless; I had severe hypothermi­a. They gave me three electric shocks and were doing CPR until we went into the helicopter.”

Tommy, who works at the University of Salford as a lifeguard, was rushed to hospital via air ambulance and placed straight onto an ECMO machine to warm his body. On arrival at the unit, his core body temperatur­e read 18 degrees – the average is 37.

He eventually woke from a fiveday coma with no memory of what had happened – and immediatel­y asked for a drink of Coke.

“My heart started again and it was a waiting game then because I could have gone back into cardiac arrest,” Tommy said.

“I could have lost a leg. I woke up in the intensive care unit – I didn’t know what had happened. I thought I had been in a car crash or something. My first memory was the two days previous.

“I’m lucky to be alive. I was in cardiac arrest for three hours – my heart stopped for three hours. The doctor said he was finding it hard to find a positive outcome for me. He didn’t think I was going to make it.”

Tommy has since made a full recovery aside from nerve damage in his hands and feet.

In a post, the Keswick Mountain Rescue Team, who saved Tommy’s life, said: “Five months on and the man who miraculous­ly cheated death is making a very good recovery and has even managed some decent runs. This was one of the lowest body temperatur­es from which someone has survived – a truly remarkable survival story and a testament to the profession­alism of all involved.”

Tommy is now raising money for Keswick Mountain Rescue Team. To donate visit: www.justgiving. com/fundraisin­g/tommy-price13

 ?? ?? Tommy has made a full recovery
Tommy has made a full recovery

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