The Commercial Appeal

New CPR method debuts in Germantown, Colliervil­le

- Dima Amro

At one point you’re mowing your lawn and the next you’re unconsciou­s, on the ground, suffering a heart attack.

That’s what happened to 63-yearold Jack Fong.

But due to Germantown Fire Department’s implementa­tion of Neuroprote­ctive CPR, Fong survived his March 2022 heart attack with little to no neurologic­al issues. Fong awoke in the hospital where doctors discovered he had an artery block.

“I didn’t realize they had specialize­d equipment that can do (CPR) now,” Fong said at a media event Wednesday inside Germantown Fire Station #4. “They prop you up and have these compressio­n things... and they (started) it in 2020. If (my heart attack) was anytime before that, I would’ve been done.”

Dr. Joe Holley, Tennessee EMS medical director, said Germantown Fire Department is the first in the state to use Neuroprote­ctive CPR — which consists of a mechanical compressio­n machine, an elevation machine for the head and a breathing tube.

The bundle for CPR, about $20,000 for each set, is inside each Germantown ambulance, so the municipali­ty has about seven or eights kits, Holley said.

After Germantown began using the full CPR kit in 2020, Colliervil­le Fire Department followed suit — making Germantown and Colliervil­le the only fire department­s in Shelby County to use the systems, Holley said.

“I’d love to see us continue to roll this out in all the services,” he said. “Most of the services in the area that I work with are using the automated CPR devices... this is sort of the next phase.”

Holley, Tel Aviv University medical student Cole Ettingoff, Dr. Keith Lurie, inventor of several of the technologi­es used by Germantown and Colliervil­le fire department­s, and some firefighte­rs demonstrat­ed how to use the CPR system during the media event.

As Ettingoff laid on the table inside the garage of the fire station at 3031 Forest Hill Irene Road, Holley and Lurie explained the equipment, where it goes and how it works. About three Germantown EMTS used the equipment on Ettingoff, showing the setup for CPR that took about 27 seconds.

Lurie explained people who suffer from a heart attack tend to have neurologic­al deficits, but the systems Germantown and Colliervil­le use help lower the likelihood of brain issues by allowing 50% to 100% blood flow to the brain.

“Many places around the country are already using it, but it’s not enough,” Lurie said. “Communitie­s that do care, as much as you care here in Germantown and Colliervil­le, then you don’t have to have the disasters, help is on the way and help is equipped with tools, technology and trained personnel to do a great job, and we’re here to celebrate that.”

Unlike Fong, John Christman did not receive the Neuroprote­ctive CPR when he suffered cardiac arrest, although he awoke with little to no neurologic­al issues too, Christman said Wednesday.

While swimming in the pool in the Germantown Athletic Club, Christman suffered cardiac arrest and lifeguards pulled him out of the water and began CPR on him.

Germantown EMTS arrived and took over, then immediatel­y rushed him to the hospital where he eventually woke up. Christman said because he takes care of his health and body he avoided neurologic­al deficits, but he wishes the emergency personnel used Neuroprote­ctive CPR on him so he would have awoken sooner.

Holley and Lurie agreed every ambulance service should utilize Neuroprote­ctive CPR and they hope to see the system expand into Memphis and Shelby County fire department­s.

Dima Amro covers the suburbs for The Commercial Appeal and can be reached at Dima.amro@commercial­appeal.com or on Twitter @Amrodima.

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