The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

“I came back from the dead”

As a national campaign pushing for wider CPR training gets underway, Michael Alexander meets a Fife man who was brought back from the dead after suffering a massive heart attack

- malexander@thecourier.co.uk

Working as a firefighte­r in Methil for 26 years, Brian Clarke knew there was often a fine line between life and death.

But the super fit grandfathe­r of eight didn’t expect to cross that line himself after a routine trip to the gym.

The 63-year-old, of St Monans, was declared clinically dead after collapsing at the wheel of his car at Anstruther Harbour.

It was only the quick thinking of a former Scotland and British Lions rugby squad physiother­apist that got his heart restarted and brought him back to life.

In a desperate bid to revive him, the owner of the gym he had just been to, Stuart Barton, immediatel­y began CPR while another customer fetched the previously unused defibrilla­tor from Stuart’s gym.

Stuart then applied the defibrilla­tor until an ambulance arrived, and medics say the prompt actions undoubtedl­y saved Brian’s life.

Despite his family being told that they should prepare for the worst, Brian astounded doctors and, after three days in an induced coma, was allowed home after 11 days.

The retired father-of-five from Belfast has thanked everyone who helped save his life.

Having returned to Anstruther Harbour this week to help film a video that will be shown to health profession­als at the Scottish Cardiac Arrest Symposium on June 24, the Ulsterman is now backing local and national campaigns for defibrilla­tors to become much more common place, and for a network of trained local people who know how to use them.

“I try to keep myself reasonably fit so I visit Stuart Barton’s gym two or three times a week when I can,” Brian told The Courier in an interview at the harbour.

“On February 15, I had been doing cycling, a bit of rowing, treadmill, light weights – nothing out of the ordinary.

“I was coming out the gym at the back of 6pm and Stuart was coming in with one of his customers, and he said ‘Is that you done Brian?’ And I said ‘Well and truly done!’

“I was messing about – it was an off-the-cuff remark saying I’d had a good workout. But little did I know that minutes later Stuart would save my life.”

Brian says he didn’t feel unwell when he left the gym. He got in his car, started to reverse – and then he remembers nothing. He’d suffered a massive heart attack resulting from a blocked artery and passed out.

“I must have felt something coming on because I put the handbrake on, but I can’t remember doing it,” he said.

A couple eating a fish supper in a neighbouri­ng car noticed something was wrong and phoned an ambulance. Meanwhile, Stuart was alerted by the customer he had been walking with earlier.

Stuart said: “I thought he’d had a seizure or a stroke because of the way he was lying. But there were no breath sounds and no pulse. His heart had stopped. He was clinically dead!

“That was when I shouted for the defibrilla­tor 50 yards away at my gym. I’d bought it a few years ago for around £2,000 and it had never been used. It was one of those things you bought hoping it would be the biggest waste of money.

“I hauled him out the car and started doing CPR.

“When the defibrilla­tor came I popped it on his chest and it did the rest – shocking the heart back into rhythm. It almost sounds so easy but it wasn’t…

“First I got his pulse back then got breath sounds back. That’s when the First Responder Gillian arrived and took over.”

Brian’s 19-year-old son David was working at the Anstruther Fish Bar and Brian’s wife Fiona was working at Ladywalk House residentia­l home, both just a few hundred yards from the collapse. But Ninewells couldn’t get a message to them until David got home after 9pm.

Fiona said: “The hospital don’t try and give you false hope. They were non-committal. His life was hanging in the balance. But he pulled through. And the day he woke up is his new birthday!”

Brian says that now he’s back home he “appreciate­s things a bit more”.

He attends cardio-rehab in Cupar once a week and has since returned to the gym.

He added: “I just want to say thank you for what everyone has done to help.”

Gillian Duncan of East Neuk First Responders said defibrilla­tors were “absolutely crucial” to saving lives in those minutes immediatel­y after cardiac arrests.

A network of 35 defibrilla­tors in the East Neuk alone were helping Fife lead the way. Yet across Scotland, 3500 out of hospital cardiac arrests take place each year, with less than 10% surviving.

This compares with a survival rate of more than 50% in many European countries where more well trained, more aware community volunteers exist.

She added: “We need to get people thinking of defibrilla­tors just like a fire extinguish­er so they’ll take it off the wall and use it.”

For more informatio­n go to www.savealife.scot

I’d bought it a few years ago... hoping it would be the biggest waste of money

STUART BARTON

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 ?? Pictures: George Mcluskie ?? Left: Stuart Barton, left with Brian Clarke outside the gym where Brian’s heart attack took place. Above: from left, Fiona Clarke, Brian Clarke, Stuart Barton, Gillian Duncan (First Responder) and Ian Wilson (paramedic St Andrews Station). Right:...
Pictures: George Mcluskie Left: Stuart Barton, left with Brian Clarke outside the gym where Brian’s heart attack took place. Above: from left, Fiona Clarke, Brian Clarke, Stuart Barton, Gillian Duncan (First Responder) and Ian Wilson (paramedic St Andrews Station). Right:...
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