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The story of a woman in China whose life was saved twice, once by a Spanish doctor who was waiting for a flight when she had a heart attack at an airport, and second by pioneering surgery, has captivated mainland social media. Photo: SCMP composite/Weibo/Douyin

China woman in life-saving double, first by ‘hero’ Spanish doctor after airport heart attack then innovative surgery

  • Woman has cardiac arrest at China airport, visiting heart doctor gives CPR
  • He is top cardiologist, invented surgical technique woman later received

The life of a woman in China has been saved twice after she had a heart attack at an airport where a Spanish cardiologist happened to be waiting for his flight.

The 53-year-old woman, surnamed Chen, had a cardiac arrest at the Wuhan Tianhe International Airport, in central China’s Hubei province, while waiting at a China Airlines gate with her husband and daughter in February.

An onlookers’ scream attracted the attention of Eduard Quintana, a cardiovascular surgeon who was travelling back to Spain.

He immediately gave first aid and CPR to Chen, bringing her back to life before a medical team arrived.

The surgeon from Hospital Clinic Barcelona has been hailed a hero by online observers in China.

Chen was treated by a pioneering medical team at a hospital in Wuhan, central China. Photo: Douyin

Chen was later diagnosed with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, a disease characterised by a thickened wall between the left and right ventricles that stops the heart from taking in and pumping out enough blood.

She was scared to learn that her disease required open-heart surgery.

Around the same time the story of her life being saved by the Spanish doctor went viral, reports revealed that Quintana was in China for training with one of the country’s best cardiologist teams, which specialises in her condition.

The team from Wuhan Tongji Hospital in central China, led by professor Wei Xiang, reportedly invented transapical beating-heart myectomy, a minimally invasive surgical method targeting Chen’s problem.

Chen contacted Wei via a telemedicine app, and on March 11, Wei’s team removed the enlarged part of her heart muscle through a 5cm incision.

Chen has been recovering well, and was up and about five days after the surgery, according to the mainland media outlet Jimu News.

Quintana sent his best wishes to her via Wei’s team.

Chen gave two pennant banners to thank Quintana, Wei and the medical team.

“It was life-saving destiny,” she saidof her good luck in meeting two top-notch cardiologists by chance.

The twice-lucky woman is recovering well after receiving the groundbreaking surgery. Photo: Douyin

China has been promoting CPR training among the public in recent years, as fewer than one per cent of Chinese people know how to give the simple but effective life-saving procedure.

The success rate of CPR in reviving people in out-of-hospital heart attacks on the mainland is less than one per cent, compared with 10 per cent in many developed countries.

Quintana praised the professional reaction of members of China Airlines staff who contacted the medical team in time and looked after other passengers well.

He told the mainland media outlet Jiupai News that he hoped the incident would show more people the value of CPR training.

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