Medicor Cardiology, part of Atlantic Medical Group with
offices in Bridgewater and Hillsborough, has donated an Automatic External
Defibrillator (AED) to the Flemington-Raritan Baseball Association for use at
their baseball complex.
An AED is used to detect an irregular heart rhythm from the
lower chambers of the heart, called ventricular fibrillation, the rhythm which
causes Sudden Cardiac Arrest. If this
arrhythmia is found, the AED then provides a shock to the heart, a life saving
treatment which aborts the arrhythmia.
Sudden cardiac arrest occurs in 450,000 people in the United
States each year and is usually fatal.
It is most commonly caused by a heart attack, but it can occur if a
projectile, such as a baseball, strikes the chest at just the right time in the
heart cycle. With sudden cardiac arrest, the arrhythmia prevents the lower
chambers of the heart, the ventricles, from pumping blood to the body. If no
blood is being pumped to the brain, the victim passes out and collapses. If a patient
suffers sudden cardiac arrest, the sooner the patient is shocked, the greater
the chance of surviving. Fifty percent of victims of sudden cardiac arrest
survive if shocked within two to three minutes, but only ten percent will live
if the shock is more than ten minutes from the time of collapse. Timing is everything and having an AED as
close as possible to potential victims can be life saving.
On October 4 2017, Medicor Cardiology presented the AED to the
Flemington-Raritan Baseball Association solidifying Medicor’s long-term
commitment to the heart health of the Hunterdon and Somerset County communities.
Prior AED donations by Medicor include
Bridgewater Baseball’s Prince Rogers Complex, Somerville Recreation’s Carol
Pager Sports Complex and the Hillsborough Baseball League fields in Mountain
View Park. The Flemington AED will be kept outside of the snack shack at the
baseball complex.
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