Healthy You - Every Day

Twice With No Heartbeat, a Survivor Rides Again

Tim Teel’s miraculous journey back from a “widow maker” heart attack

Tim Teel hopped on his Italian-made motorcycle June 1 and rambled off with friends for an 80-mile ride. He had no words for his emotions. The feeling was indescribable – and completely understandable.

Less than three weeks earlier, on Monday, May 13, Teel lay on a gurney in the triage area at Lehigh Valley Hospital (LVH)–Carbon with no heartbeat for more than 10 minutes as doctors and nurses worked to revive him. Once revived, his heart later went silent again for a similar period, but like the first time, returned with the assistance of LVH–Carbon clinicians.

Did you know?

LVHN consistently ranks among the best in the nation in heart attack survival.

Today, Teel, 57, is back at work as director of instrument design at famed guitar maker C.F. Martin and Co. in Nazareth where he’s worked for 38 years.

For the Towamensing Township, Carbon County resident, the stars aligned the day his heart stopped. Combined with expert care, he’s back with his family and the life he loves.

Before the health crisis

About two weeks before his heart attack, Teel says he complained to his family doctor about pain on his right side of this stomach and thought maybe he had gallstones. Ultrasound testing showed no stones and Teel says no problems were noticed on the right side of his heart, which appeared in the ultrasound images. He felt better and had no other concerning symptoms. Other tests showed Teel’s cholesterol was on the rise and the decision was made to treat that with diet and exercise.

The weekend before his heart attack, Teel was working hard on some projects around his home.

That fateful Monday, Teel went to work as usual. When he got home late in the afternoon, he mowed the grass, trimmed weeds and prepared dinner. His wife, Debbie, was at work and was getting off at 8 p.m.

When Debbie called him at 8:15 p.m. on her way home, Teel said he was having some chest pain on his left side which was a new symptom for him. His back hurt, too. They decided to keep an eye on his symptoms.

When Debbie got home, Teel says he was feeling a bit better. Debbie showered and began to eat her dinner. But Teel says he suddenly began to feel much worse. He tried to lie down, but that was no help. He felt worse. He told Debbie they needed to go to the hospital right away. LVH–Carbon was about eight miles away.

“I said ‘Don’t stop for red lights’,” Teel recalls. “The closer we got to the hospital, the worse I felt.”

At the hospital

Teel arrived at the hospital’s triage area, where he described his pain as a nine out of 10. That’s the last he recalls before waking up the next day in intensive care at LVH–Cedar Crest, where he’d been taken by MedEvac helicopter.

At LVH–Carbon, Teel’s heart stopped twice during efforts to keep it pumping, each time for 10 minutes or more. All during that time, resuscitation efforts continued non-stop. His heart was shocked at least six times.

Once Teel’s EKG revealed a possible heart attack, the on-call interventional cardiologist, Shailendra Singh, MD, was contacted. Dr. Singh decided to immediately fly Teel to LVH–Cedar Crest so he could further evaluate Teel’s cardiac arteries and heart function. A cardiac catheterization revealed Teel had a totally blocked left anterior descending artery. Heart attacks related to this major artery are sometimes called “widow makers” because it commonly is the largest artery in the heart and supplies the most amount of blood in the heart circulation.

“It makes what we do so impactful and very rewarding. It allows us to be part of a story of hope and resilience.” - Shailendra Singh, MD

When Teel arrived at LVH–Cedar Crest, his heart’s pumping capacity was exceptionally low, three times lower than normal. To stabilize Teel’s overall circulation, Dr. Singh installed a miniature heart pump to help Teel’s heart rest and relax.

Dr. Singh says he used innovative devices to effectively clear Teel’s blocked artery in long, intricate procedures. Ultrasound imaging revealed the blockage was calcified and extremely hard. A clot was also seen at the blockage site. Dr. Singh used a tiny diamond-tipped, cone-shaped burr to clear away most of the blockage, then a device that uses sonic pressure waves on the blockage to be able to install a stent in the artery to keep it open and flowing smoothly.

Doctor’s notes

Dr. Singh says since Teel’s heart blockage was “clearly the culprit,” he decided to immediately fly him to LVH–Cedar Crest, rather than take time for more testing to determine whether the length of time Teel’s heart was not beating had led to any neurological damage.

Teel, a father of one and grandfather of four, arrived at LVH–Cedar Crest intubated to help him breathe, and sedated.

Teel is a Jehovah’s Witness, and he had an advance directive against the use of blood products, in keeping with his faith. LVHN’s blood management program then played a key role in his treatment to help ensure those wishes were met.

“It’s very common to require blood products for ensuring adequate cell counts in these cases since blood counts may drop for a variety of reasons,” Dr. Singh says. “We took every effective measure to make sure we didn’t need to use any blood products. I utilized all my options to minimize blood loss like we normally do.”

The result for Teel and the cardiac team was spectacular. Teel’s heart function swiftly improved to normal when he left the hospital nine days later and he suffered no neurological damage.

“Words cannot describe the incredible feeling of being able to help Tim in his most vulnerable moment,” Dr. Singh says. “It makes what we do so impactful and very rewarding. It allows us to be part of a story of hope and resilience.”

Dr. Singh says the role of doctors, nurses and other clinicians at LVH–Carbon can’t be understated. “Because of their expert emergency care, because of their refusal to give up, Tim was given a chance to get to Allentown and have his blockage cleared and his organ function stabilized,” Dr. Singh says. “It really illustrates the value of LVHN hospital care across the region.”

Looking back

While expert medical care saved Teel, Dr. Singh says there was “definitely someone up above” playing a role. Had Teel not been in the LVH–Carbon ER when his heart stopped, this story may have had a different ending. Teel agrees.

Teel says when he asked in the ICU if he could ride his motorcycles again, Debbie knew he was going to be fine.

He says his care at LVHN was beyond his expectations. “I haven’t had a whole lot of interaction with hospitals,” he says. “From the moment I walked in the door at the ER until I left the Allentown campus, everyone was just rooting for me and taking good care of me. I wanted for nothing.”

Teel says a good friend of his stopped to see him after he got home and told him he was fortunate for three reasons: That he made it through, that he had Dr. Singh, and that he was cared for at the best hospital in the area.

Teel says 35 years ago, his uncle on his dad’s side, died from the same kind of heart attack. That uncle died on the way to the former Gnadden Huetten Memorial Hospital in Lehighton, he says. Teel says he coincidentally thought of his uncle not long before his own heart attack. “It might have been a precursor,” he mused.

Teel’s family was grateful for the excellent care he received. In a note to Dr. Singh, they wrote that “all the expertise and knowledge you had shown during his surgeries and procedures saved his life and gave him the best chance of a miraculous recovery.”

For now, Teel says because a stent was installed, he’s on medication to prevent his platelets from binding together and clotting. He takes medicine for blood pressure and cholesterol and attends cardiac rehabilitation through LVHN. After a huge health care bump in the road, life is nearly back to normal.

“Every day, I’m thankful to be here,” Teel says.

Lehigh Valley Heart and Vascular Institute

Lehigh Valley Heart and Vascular Institute

Preventing and treating heart disease

The Heart and Vascular Institute is comprised of several multidisciplinary teams working together to treat complex conditions of the heart.

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