On February 26, 2018, Ohio State’s Keita Bates-Diop was named Big Ten Men’s Basketball Player of the Year. His talents ran in the family with his younger brother, Kai, following in his footsteps. Kai was on the fast track to basketball stardom till he was struck by a “cardiac event” while practicing with his teammates on February 9th, 2017. No one would have ever expected Kai, a healthy 15 year old athlete, to drop and go into cardiac arrest during one of his everyday activities. Moments before collapsing on the court he said, "My heart feels weird." Suddenly, he had no pulse and was not breathing. Seconds after he collapsed, an athletic trainer intern, Maddie Biehl, started cardiopulmonary resuscitation on Kai to keep oxygen-rich blood pumping to his brain. Emily Martz, another intern, ran to retrieve an Automatic External Defibrillator in the trainer’s office. While one was doing chest compressions, the other one was prepping the AED. The CPR and AED, used together by the heroic athletic trainers, are what saved Kai’s life! Sudden Cardiac Arrest is always fatal unless rescuers or bystanders can respond within seconds with CPR and an AED. According to the American Heart Association, only 10% of SCA victims will survive outside of a hospital setting. Chances of survival drops by 7-10% with every passing minute someone goes without oxygen, CPR, and a defibrillator to shock their heart back into rhythm. After 10 minutes, the chance of survival in adults is less than 5%. In the United States, 1 school-aged child dies every 3-4 days from a heart condition. Luckily, Kai was not part of that statistic. Upon arriving to the hospital, Kai’s mother, Wilma, learned that her son had had no pulse and that an AED was used to revive him. Kai's father, Richard, recounts the event saying, "I wasn't even sure what an AED was at the time. Now I know exactly what they do and I also know exactly why it was important to have both CPR and AED, because otherwise, Kai was not going to make it. If it weren't for the trainers applying CPR and using the AED, he wouldn't be here today.” After running some tests, doctors found that Kai had a condition called Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. His father warned that, "Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is not apparent that you might have it. That's what is so surprising is that you just don't know sometimes. There wasn't any kind of warning… or anything like that." Most parents do not know that their child has an underlying heart condition like HCM.
Wilma wants to stress the importance of CPR and the deployment of an AED because one without the other could mean that her child is not here today. "The CPR was what kept his heart going while the AED was used to shock it Sources
Written by Blaire Czarniecki
Customer Service Director
Fact checked by Phillip Woods, BA, NREMT-P, FP-C
Blaire attended the University of Tennessee where she graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Human Ecology- Child and Family Studies. She has been in the Automated External Defibrillator (AED) industry for over eight years and is the Director of Customer Service for Coro Medical. Blaire is also an American Red Cross-certified CPR/AED/First Aid Instructor, highly trained by each manufacturer on their specific AEDs, and knowledgeable regarding ALL State AED regulations and legislation.
“I know that every day I come to work, I am playing a part in saving someone’s life. I am passionate about these devices and am always looking for new and innovative ways to spread awareness and knowledge about Sudden Cardiac Arrest (SCA). I look forward to the day when everywhere I go, I will see an AED—when SCA will no longer take any lives.”
Last updated March 30, 2018