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Wednesday, 23 September 2015

How An Apple Watch Helped Save A High School Football Player's Life

Source: http://ift.tt/hFWySe --- Tuesday, September 22, 2015
On the morning of Sept. 8, 18-year-old Paul Houle Jr. lined up in his nose tackle position at the year's first football practice, feeling healthy and ready to take on the season ahead. By 8 p.m., Houle was in an emergency room at a nearby hospital. His heart, liver and kidneys were all shutting down. "Doctors told me that if I had not said anything and gone to practice the next day, I very easily could have died," Houle told The Huffington Post over the phone.  Houle, a senior at Tabor Academy in Marion, Massachusetts, had come down with an acute condition called rhabdomyolysis  after participating in two football practices in the sweltering heat, Cape Cod-based health care news service One Cape Health News   first reported.   The condition is a known risk for amateur athletes engaging in physically strenuous summer workouts .  Houle was dehydrated and overheated from participating in two practices in one day, and the muscles in his body had begun to break down and release a protein into his bloodstream that was causing his vital organs to fail. Houle told HuffPost that after the day's second practice, he felt back pain whenever he took a deep breath.  "I thought I was just sore and a l ittle out of shape because the practice was hard. I  didn’t think much of it," he said. "Later, when I was at the hospital, they let me know that my back pain was actually my kidneys failing."  Back at his dorm room  after practice, Houle said ...



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