Three versions of Adelaide's death, the doctor relates what could have happened to her (Photo)

Even before the findings of forensic expertise were released, police rushed to draw a diagnosis from which, according to her, the late 31-year-old journalist Adelaida Jamaican suffered, while media reported as a cause of death, a heart attack, spreading panic in the population because of the journalist's very young age. In that day's statement, the police [...]
Even before the findings of forensic expertise were released, police rushed to draw a diagnosis from which, according to her, the late 31-year-old journalist Adelaida Jamaican suffered, while media reported as a cause of death, a heart attack, spreading panic in the population because of the journalist's very young age.
In that day's statement the police said 31-year-old was suffering from seizures, while in electronic media and social networks, they claimed a heart attack. Even at this point, the information was duplicated because several online media described acne and several other cardiac arrest, which according to experts are two entirely different medical terms. To be as transparent to the public, we addressed cardiologists at QSUT, where we received contact with the chief of this service, Professor Petrit Bara.
In its explanation Dr Bara says that the term heart attack is wrong and does not exist in medical literature. The doctor lists some of the acute heart diseases described as overly life - threatening, which, according to him, do not appear as lightning in the clear sky but much earlier than the patient's condition gets worse. Bara says that the heart attack has probably been used instead of the epileptic attack, a brain disorder characterized by repeated and unpronounced crises but that does not pose a threat to life, much more young people who have not been cured by seizures or heart disease. The epileptic is accompanied by warning signs lasting between 3 and 5 minutes and leaving traces on the patient, such as foaming from the mouth of the tongue, loss of control, etc.
Unlike the other media term epipitic attack, cardiac arrest is the ban on heart rate that leads to respiratory paralysis and the obstruction of blood to the brain. As a result, the patient loses consciousness and dies if he does not receive emergency assistance. But according to the doctor, arrest does not occur without a cause and without a trace.
The chief of the QSUT Cardiology Service says caution should be taken from the use of soothing drugs such as morphine or peditina, which could lead to cardio-respiratory arrest of patients who have passed through a paraonphant or a machine heart attack. Even then, the doctor rules out young ones who have not shown previous symptoms.
In cases of disaster, says the doctor, legal medicine should be cut off for the cause of death while calling on people not to ignore the warning signs of heart failure. /News 24/













