http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news...er-suffers-heart-attack-plane-sources-n699646
Details are just coming in. Hoping for the best.
Details are just coming in. Hoping for the best.
Yes. They apparently used CPR on the plane. She got more medical attention once landed at LAX.It happened on a plane?!?! I hope for the best but even if she survives, I can't see her being anywhere close to the same...
Yes. They apparently used CPR on the plane. She got more medical attention once landed at LAX.
Not at the moment. I'm sure more details will come. There apparently was an EMT on board.Do you know how long she was on the plane after it happened? There's always a chance but how sad.
I read somewhere last 10 mins of flight. I'm not sure how accurate that is but it makes sense because if she had it mid flight I think they would have put down early for a medical emergency?Do you know how long she was on the plane after it happened? There's always a chance but how sad.
I keep checking the internet for updates on her condition, doesn't look like there's been any change.
Carrie Fisher: Actress spending Christmas in intensive care following cardiac arrest. Friends and family say there has been 'no change' in star's condition, amid reports she is being kept alive by a ventilator.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/p...s-leia-star-wars-intensive-care-a7494991.html
According to the reports from air traffic control/etc that the LA papers dug up...she was down for 10+ minutes...
That's a long time without oxygen.
I think the consensus is that she's likely not coming out of it...but reports have been "reserved" to this point.
10+ minutes is not good. Every second reduces your chance of survival by 10%.
Someone started CPR on me immediately and it was touch and go.
Cardiac arrest is:
Cardiac arrest is the abrupt loss of heart function caused by malfunctioning electrical impulses, unlike a heart attack, which is the death of heart muscle tissue due to a loss of blood supply to the heart. Cardiac arrest is the third-leading cause of death in America behind heart disease and cancer, according to the National Academies of Medicine.