A shock received right above the heart and during the fraction of a second when its beat is most vulnerable: "everything came together" to cause the cardiac arrest suffered by Buffalo player Damar Hamlin on Monday, according to several medical experts .

Sumeet Chugh, medical director of the Heart Rhythm Center at the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai in California, told AFP that this scenario is one of many possible explanations for the accident suffered by the 24-year-old player. years, playing in the NFL.

Hamlin was revived after cardiac massage on the field at Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati during this NFL regular season game between the Bills and the Bengals.

He was then taken by ambulance to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where he remains hospitalized in critical condition in the intensive care unit.

He has, however, shown some signs of improvement in his health over the past few hours.

30 millisecond window

Before discussing the extremely rare phenomenon that could be the cause of Hamlin's heart attack, Sumeet Chugh stressed that in the absence of more information from doctors, any explanation is "pure speculation". .

But based on "the obvious circumstances surrounding the tackle," Hamlin's cardiac arrest may well have resulted from a "commotio cordis" (shock to the heart).

"This is a fairly rare case where some sort of blunt object has to hit the chest just above the heart, within a tiny 30 millisecond window," Sumeet Chugh detailed.

This throws the heart into "electric chaos", and instead of beating normally 60 to 80 times per minute, it stops.

This leads to ventricular fibrillation, and most of the time, sudden death.


America is praying with the Bills for Damar Hamlin right now.

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— Tim Young (@TimRunsHisMouth) January 3, 2023

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It was therefore necessary that the impact be already quite violent - which is very often the case in American football -, but above all that it should take place exactly in the wrong place and at the critical moment, for the drama to take place. produce.

Eugene Chung, professor of cardiology at the University of Michigan, agrees with the "commotio cordis" scenario, although "we don't have enough information to say definitively that this is the cause".

According to Sumeet Chugh, this type of accident is most often caused by an ice hockey puck or baseball, but can also be caused by a punch or elbow.

"It's so rare that I would say there are 20 to 25 cases in the United States a year," he said.

The previous Chris Pronger

The best-known precedent is that of a National Hockey League player, defenseman Chris Pronger, of the St Louis Blues, who suffered a cardiac arrest after being punched in the chest during a game. playoffs in 1998. The player recovered and continued to play in the NHL until 2012, earning him a

Hall of Fame

induction .

Sumeet Chugh cannot, however, rule out other potential causes behind the accident suffered by Damar Hamlin, such as a heart defect or a genetic disease.

“Most of the time, when there is a cardiac arrest on the pitch, it is because the athlete has a heart problem”, which “can be detected relatively effectively”.

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