A woman who has been in a state of cardiac arrest for six hours miraculously survives.

On Sunday, foreign media including the British BBC told a story that a woman who had gone to the threshold of death at the Valdebronn Hospital in Barcelona, ​​Spain, has recovered from health.

Audrey Shoman, 34, from England, went hiking with his husband, Lohan Shoman, to the Spanish Pyrenees.

The peaceful hike quickly turned into a nightmare with a blizzard. Due to the sharp fall, Audrey's temperature dropped to about 18 degrees, and she was unconscious.

She was taken to the hospital by a rescue team who had been reported by her husband, but her condition was very serious. Eduardo Argudo, the physician who had performed the surgery, recalled that time, "she seemed dead."

But instead of giving up hope, medical staff attached her to Ekmo (ECMO), a device that replaces the heart and lungs, and oxygenated the blood.

After her temperature rose to 30 degrees, cardiopulmonary resuscitation progressed, and at the crossroads of life and death, she was able to survive dramatically in about six hours of cardiac arrest.

The doctor in charge said, "She almost died of hypothermia, but paradoxically, it could have prevented the deterioration of the brain and other injuries." "

Another intention was described as "very rare" and described as "scientist not like the word, but as a miracle."

Audrey is relatively healthy now. She expressed her feelings, "I'm lucky to have survived," but she also expressed a passion for "I won't go to the mountains this winter, but I'll go again when spring comes."

'News Pick'.

(Photo = 'Audrey Schoeman' Facebook)