Ormskirk Advertiser

Man drowned in bath after cardiac event

- BY AMY FENTON

AMAN collapsed and drowned after falling into his bath following a rare cardiac event, an inquest has heard.

Andy Osbourne Milnes from Skelmersda­le was last seen on December 3 last year.

A neighbour of the 48-year-old called 999 two days later after seeing water coming from his house in Tilcroft and not having seen Andy for some time.

When police forced their way into Andy’s home they found the living room flooded with water.

Firefighte­rs arrived to make the scene safe and found Andy dead in the bath, fully-clothed, with the tap running.

An inquest at Preston Coroner’s Court today heard that detectives launched an investigat­ion to determine what had happened to Andy, who lived alone, and ascertain whether or not a third party was involved in his death.

In what was described during the inquest as a ‘very unusual and very tragic set of circumstan­ces’ it was revealed that Andy had an unknown rare heart condition which had caused him to collapse.

The inquest heard that Andy, who was born in Ormskirk, had been washing his hands in the bath because the tap on his sink wasn’t working. A Home Office post mortem was carried out because there were concerns that serious injuries he had suffered in a car crash five months earlier could have been responsibl­e for his death.

Pathologis­t Dr Alison Armour gave evidence at the inquest and revealed that it was the unknown heart condition, right ventricula­r dysplasia, which had caused Andy to collapse, fall into the bath and drown.

She concluded that the injuries Andy sustained in the collision played no part in his death.

“He had been to hospital in the June and an ECG was carried out and there was an abnormalit­y on the ECG but his condition wasn’t picked up,” Dr Armour said.

“To pick it up you would have to have an echocardio­gram which is an ultrasound of the heart.

“It is my view that whilst in the bathroom he had a cardiac arrhythmia, fell into the bath and he drowned as a result.

He did sustain some quite serious injuries in the road traffic collision including a fractured skull, contusions to the brain and rib fractures however the bruising to the brain had almost completely healed, the skull fracture had healed and the rib fractures almost healed as well as the pubic bone fracture.”

Arrhythmog­enic right ventricula­r dysplasia, also known as cardiomyop­athy is a rare familial disorder that can cause ventricula­r tachycardi­a and sudden cardiac death in young, apparently healthy individual­s. Symptoms include dizziness, fainting after exercise and palpitatio­ns.

Senior Coroner Dr James Adeley described Andy’s death as a ‘very unusual and tragic set of circumstan­ces’.

Returning a narrative conclusion he said to Andy’s mum: “Although he had been involved in a significan­t road traffic collision five months earlier none of that is relevant to what has actually caused his death which is entirely due to his heart condition.

“He had a very rare condition affecting his heart and in a very few of those very rare conditions it can be passed down from generation to generation. “

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