What a day... a roasty, toasty day on top of it.
Great job, Wahine - a learning experience is STILL a victory, and you still could have kicked many of our butts.
Not getting a sunburn... not ending up dehydrated and miserable... MAJOR win.
What a day... a roasty, toasty day on top of it.
Great job, Wahine - a learning experience is STILL a victory, and you still could have kicked many of our butts.
Not getting a sunburn... not ending up dehydrated and miserable... MAJOR win.
Pulmonary edema essentially causes drowning if bad enough -- no matter what the cause. So, yes, it would likely be asystole also.Would the same thing happen if he had swimming induced pulmonary edema?
An article I read recently says they wonder how many people that "drown" actually have had pulmonary edema, and you cannot tell post-death what caused all the fluid in the lungs. Just that they drowned. Can anyone else confirm that? I'm not really a specialist in autopsy stuff! That's why we send stuff to the lab!
All in all, this is quite sad, but likely nothing to do with the race organization. Other than having oxygen mask and diuretics on the kayaks, it sounds like this was unpreventable on their part. Although I didn't get to read the newspaper articles (not that they are usually all that informative) -- I was too late, and the NEW news has replaced it.
Jes
Everyone Deserves a Lifetime
Wahine:
Sorry to hear about your tummy troubles- interesting article you found on DGE though!
I guess it is the quest for the perfect race that keeps everyone coming back! I 'm with KSH - even your bad races I find phenomenal- I understand why you don't (PBs are ALWAYS nicer) but there's always next time
I feel badly about that poor swimmer- his family must be suffering- it would be a terrible shock.![]()
The cure for anything is salt water;
sweat, tears or the sea
Isak Dinesen