David Ginola health: Former footballer had 'no pulse' for eight minutes – 'I was dead'

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    “My heart stopped for eight minutes at least,” David Ginola remembered. “There was no pulse. I was dead.” Revived via a defibrillator, the sportsman’s wife, Maeva Denat, fears it could happen again in the Welsh castle. Joining other campmates on I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! David will be tackling creepy crawlies and pangs of hunger. Speaking to The Sun on Sunday, model Maeva Denat said: “My biggest fear is he goes away and then something happens.

    “I dread the thought of him not coming home… What if something happens like before?”

    Back in 2016, David – then 49 years of age – was running back to the halfway line when his heart stopped.

    Talking about the whole incident, David recalled: “The players thought I was joking but then my friend said, ‘Look at him, he is not OK, he is not fooling around.’

    “I swallowed my tongue and my friends fought to get it out of my throat, but my teeth kept clamping down on their fingers.

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    “Someone called the emergency services and they said, ‘Forget the tongue, he is dead, his heart has stopped, you need to concentrate on pumping his chest.’

    “My heart stopped for eight minutes at least. There was no pulse. I was dead.

    “Then the air ambulance arrived and they hooked me up to a defibrillator.

    “They sent three electric shocks to my chest and when the third didn’t work they started to lose hope.

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    “But my friends told them, ‘Do not give up. David is fighting hard.’ Somehow they could see that my body was fighting to stay alive.

    “After the fourth, my heart started again. The ambulance worker turned to my friends and said, ‘I have a pulse.’ Everyone started cheering and crying.”

    Maeva is fearful that her beloved husband’s lifestyle could contribute to another attack.

    “Like most French people, he likes to drink wine and smoke, but I’ve been trying to get him to stop,” she explained.

    A cardiac arrest usually happens without warning, causing a person to suddenly collapse.

    The affected person will be unconscious, unresponsive and won’t be breathing normally (i.e. making gasping noises) – or won’t be breathing at all.

    “Without immediate treatment or medical attention, the person will die,” the BHF warned.

    “If you see someone having a cardiac arrest, phone 999 immediately and start CPR.” The BHF offer details on how to perform CPR.



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