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This man was clinically dead but 2 life-saving machines kept his blood pumping until his heart could recover

Chris Dawkins, 55, suffered a cardiac arrest in February. He was saved after a rare procedure that included nearly an hour of CPR and 48 hours hooked up to a machine that bypasses the heart and lungs. On Monday, Dawkins met the paramedics who helped save him.

Chris Dawkins, 55, was saved after cardiac arrest when a machine replaced his heart and lungs for 48 hours

Chris Dawkins, a physician who became the patient when he suffered cardiac arrest in February, speaks with Ben Johnson, one of the advanced life support paramedics who helped save his life. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Chris Dawkins, a 55-year-old Vancouver physician, was clinically dead. After a routine 20-minute session on his rowing machine in early February, Dawkins went into cardiac arrest.

But with the help of his wife, a 911 call-taker, two paramedics,a 15-person medical team at St. Paul's Hospitaland two life-saving machines that keep blood flowing to the patient's brain, Dawkins is now healthy, walking aroundand back at work.

On Monday, for the first time, he met the paramedics who answered the call in February.

"I gave them hugs and said, 'Thank you for saving my life' because they did," said Dawkins.

A Lucas chest compression machine is set up on a training dummy at St. Paul's Hospital, while Chris Dawkins meets the paramedics and 911 call-taker who helped save his life in February. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Two months after the emergency,Dawkins has a bruise and some broken ribs to show for his brush with death, but he has otherwise healed up remarkably well. He's in awe of the number of things that perfectly alignedto make his case one of the raresuccesses.

"It's phenomenal," said Dawkins. "It's, sort of, almost unreal."

First, his wife immediately came to his aid when it became clear something was wrong. She dialled 911 and quickly began CPR until advanced life support paramedics, Tom Watson and Ben Johnson, arrived.

Watson and Johnsonhad one of the region'sfew Lucas chest compression devices in their ambulance, allowing them to handle other things like driving to the hospital and administering drugs.

At St. Paul's Hospital, a team was ready and waiting for their arrival, with one of five $250,000 ECMO machines in Greater Vancouver at their disposal.

The machine, whose technical name is extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine, allows doctors to bypass the patient's heart and lungsand keep blood flowing to the brain.

Dawkins was connected to the machine within an hour of his cardiac arrest, and he spent the next two days hooked up to the ECMO,until his heart was able to do its job again.

'Everything worked out so perfectly'

Brian Grunau is an emergency physician at St. Paul's. Hehas been involved in the ECMO program in the three years since paramedics, emergency room doctorsand surgeons began hammering out a new set of procedures to apply in cases where the ECMO machines could be used forpeople who suffer cardiac arrest outside of the hospital.

The ECMO machine costs about $250,000 and stands in for the patient's lungs and heart, providing the brain with oxygenated blood flow. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

According to Grunau, there are about 400 cardiac arrest cases in the Metro Vancouver area each year, and since the program began in 2016, the procedure with the Lucas chest compression machine and the ECMOhas been tried about 25 times.

Grunau said Dawkins' is one of only four successful cases.

"I thinkwhat's special about this case is just that everything worked out so perfectly," said Grunau. "It's pretty amazing that you have a person who's been clinically dead for an hour, getting CPR, and then is [given this treatment], leaves hospital a week later with absolutely no ... side effects, any complications, any long-term damage."


Is there more to this story? Email rafferty.baker@cbc.ca

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