They are Trying to Normalise Heart Attacks Amongst the Young and Healthy!
They are trying to normalise heart attacks amongst the young and healthy!
“It can happen to anybody”
Yes, of course, especially if they’ve been vaxxed!
‘BIT OF A SHOCK’ Ten-time Wimbledon champion Todd Woodbridge, 51, suffers shock heart attack and issues urgent health warning
TEN-TIME Wimbledon doubles champion Todd Woodbridge has suffered a heart attack aged just 51.
The Aussie described the shock incident as a “wake-up call” even for the fittest of middle-aged people and declared “it can happen to anybody”.
Woodbridge suffered a shock heart attack despite leading a healthy lifestyle
Woodbridge (right) and Mark Woodforde holding their trophies after winning their Men’s Doubles final at Wimbledon in 2000
Woodbridge was exercising when he started to feel chest pains.
The ten-time Wimbledon doubles champ told the Herald: “It was last Thursday, I tried to keep my routine having travelled to the US Open and London, and I was just exercising and had chest pains and every symptom when you look up Google – full sweats and I felt awful.
“I had a little heart episode that goes down as a mild heart attack, which is a bit of a shock to me.
“I consider (I) lead a pretty good fit healthy lifestyle – I keep active, I eat well, I do all the right things, I enjoy doing that.
“It’s been a wake-up call to me to make sure I look after myself.
“If it can happen to me it shows that it can happen to anybody.”
At 51, Woodbridge is a year younger than Shane Warne when he had his fatal attack.
Days after Warne’s passing, another high-profile Aussie athlete, former AFL star Dean Wallis, 52, suffered a major heart attack but survived following life-saving surgery.
WA cricket great Ryan Campbell, 50, survived a cardiac arrest in April.
And in May, West Coast Eagles premiership player Peter Matera, 53, suffered a heart attack while he was chopping wood on his property in Victoria.
Former Australian cricket coach Darren Lehman was saved by a triple bypass surgery after a heart attack in the early hours of his 50th birthday.
He continued: “I’ve hit that age now where I need to make sure that I have regular testing, get to the doctors.
“I’d urge anybody out there coming off the last couple of years (of lockdowns), where we’ve gone, nah I’m OK, haven’t been to doctors, haven’t had check-ups, to ensure you get out there and do that.
“I’ve been fortunate enough to go and get all the tests, and I’m OK. With good monitoring and a bit of mild medication moving forward, I’ll be fine.
“But what I did learn was how important hereditary genes are to your health, and I am aware that both my mum and dad have had a few issues with needing some stents and my dad had very high cholesterol.
“My advice is, don’t put off what you’ve been planning to do.
“Because I’d been planning to get my next bits of tests, we all lead a busy life and that becomes next month and then that becomes six months, and you still haven’t done it, and I was a bit guilty of that.
“The best part is, I’m back up and running. I need to take it easy, I can’t do anything physical, but I’m still able to do my general work.”
Resources:
https://t.me/LauraAbolichannel/24219
https://www.thesun.co.uk/sport/20095656/wimbledon-champion-todd-woodbridge-heart-attack/