
Hong Kong woman opens up about life after moment her heart stopped beating
More than a decade ago, Hongkonger Olivia Cheung Lok-man's heart stopped beating for 63 minutes.
She was a 19-year-old student at the time and had suffered a fulminant myocarditis attack, a rare and severe illness that can cause heart failure.
Cheung, now a 30-year-old art teacher, has since developed the ability to cope with the uncertainties surrounding her condition, thanks to the special care of the medical team at Queen Mary Hospital's intensive care unit (ICU).
'I have experienced [near death], I don't think there's anything [my family and I] can't deal with,' she said.
Cheung and her doctor spoke to the media on Monday as part of the hospital's work with the Shaw Foundation to offer in-person and online activities to educate the public about intensive care treatments and patients' experiences.
Last year, lawmakers passed a legislative amendment that allows terminally ill patients to reject certain treatments, such as undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), as the end of their life nears.
Simon Sin Wai-ching, the critical care unit doctor at Queen Mary Hospital who treated Cheung, said he hoped more of the public, especially young people, would give more thought to what first aid options they were willing to undergo.
'How do patients feel before entering the ICU? How do they feel during intubation? If we can set up a platform for them to share such stories, it's much more effective than having doctors and residents guess what those procedures feel like,' he said.
He noted that less than 20 per cent of patients die in ICUs, where hospitals' best resources are available.
Speaking about his time treating Cheung, the doctor said her heart had suddenly skipped a few beats when she began suffering the fulminant myocarditis attack.
Sin said the hospital where Cheung was initially admitted had lacked an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine (ECMO), which acts as an artificial heart and lung.
An ECMO and a team of specialists had to be brought over from Queen Mary Hospital to keep her alive, he added.
The doctor recalled that the team was still travelling to the other hospital by taxi when they learned that Cheung's heart had completely stopped.
At the time of Cheung's fulminant myocarditis attack, each procedure using an ECMO cost more than HK$1 million. Most patients cannot survive undergoing CPR for more than 20 minutes.
'But the whole team was already in the taxi, and there was no place for a U-turn, so we sped ahead,' Sin said, noting an experienced ICU doctor who was jogging nearby had rushed to the hospital to perform CPR on Cheung.
Sixty-three minutes later, the specialist team were prepared for the operation and managed to get Cheung's heart beating again.
Sin recounted Cheung's miraculous survival in his book, When Suffering Becomes Life , which shares the post-ICU stories of his former patients.
Surviving also marked the start of a life of recovery for Cheung.
'I had to relearn writing and walking, but I picked up those skills again very quickly,' she said.
Her father, Cheung Wing-hung, said: 'When I first heard Olivia was saved, I worried about taking care of her. Would she need support to use the toilet [after hospitalisation]?'
While Olivia Cheung gradually recovered from her near-death experience, it continued to have an impact on her life eight years later, when she woke up one night having wet the bed and with a bleeding tongue.
In a check-up, doctors found she had epilepsy as her brain lacked oxygen when her heart stopped.
'Now I cannot drive a car. The medicine for epilepsy also made me too tired to work during the first two weeks I was on it,' she said.
But Cheung said that, in spite of her experiences, she remained positive and felt her problems were 'minor ones' compared with what others had gone through.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Godiva ordered by Hong Kong govt to halt dark chocolate ice cream sale after bacteria find
Hong Kong authorities have ordered a branch of Belgian luxury chocolatier Godiva to halt the sale of its dark chocolate soft ice cream after a sample was found to contain a bacterial count 46 times above the legal limit. The Centre for Food Safety said on Thursday that the sample collected from the shop at Cityplaza in Tai Koo had 2.3 million bacteria per gram – 46 times higher than the legal limit of 50,000. 'The centre has informed the vendor involved of the irregularity and instructed it to stop selling and immediately dispose of the affected product,' a spokesman said. 'Prosecution will be instituted should there be sufficient evidence.' Under the Frozen Confections Regulation, those convicted of selling frozen confections with bacterial levels exceeding the legal limit face a maximum penalty of a fine of HK$10,000 (US$1,273) and three months' imprisonment. The spokesman said the centre had asked Godiva to carry out a thorough cleaning and disinfection. He added that the centre had also provided health education on food safety and hygiene to the vendor's representative and staff. The centre also noted that the total bacterial count exceeding the legal limit indicated unsatisfactory hygienic conditions, but that did not mean that consumption would lead to food poisoning. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Hong Kong woman opens up about life after moment her heart stopped beating
More than a decade ago, Hongkonger Olivia Cheung Lok-man's heart stopped beating for 63 minutes. She was a 19-year-old student at the time and had suffered a fulminant myocarditis attack, a rare and severe illness that can cause heart failure. Cheung, now a 30-year-old art teacher, has since developed the ability to cope with the uncertainties surrounding her condition, thanks to the special care of the medical team at Queen Mary Hospital's intensive care unit (ICU). 'I have experienced [near death], I don't think there's anything [my family and I] can't deal with,' she said. Cheung and her doctor spoke to the media on Monday as part of the hospital's work with the Shaw Foundation to offer in-person and online activities to educate the public about intensive care treatments and patients' experiences. Last year, lawmakers passed a legislative amendment that allows terminally ill patients to reject certain treatments, such as undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), as the end of their life nears. Simon Sin Wai-ching, the critical care unit doctor at Queen Mary Hospital who treated Cheung, said he hoped more of the public, especially young people, would give more thought to what first aid options they were willing to undergo. 'How do patients feel before entering the ICU? How do they feel during intubation? If we can set up a platform for them to share such stories, it's much more effective than having doctors and residents guess what those procedures feel like,' he said. He noted that less than 20 per cent of patients die in ICUs, where hospitals' best resources are available. Speaking about his time treating Cheung, the doctor said her heart had suddenly skipped a few beats when she began suffering the fulminant myocarditis attack. Sin said the hospital where Cheung was initially admitted had lacked an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine (ECMO), which acts as an artificial heart and lung. An ECMO and a team of specialists had to be brought over from Queen Mary Hospital to keep her alive, he added. The doctor recalled that the team was still travelling to the other hospital by taxi when they learned that Cheung's heart had completely stopped. At the time of Cheung's fulminant myocarditis attack, each procedure using an ECMO cost more than HK$1 million. Most patients cannot survive undergoing CPR for more than 20 minutes. 'But the whole team was already in the taxi, and there was no place for a U-turn, so we sped ahead,' Sin said, noting an experienced ICU doctor who was jogging nearby had rushed to the hospital to perform CPR on Cheung. Sixty-three minutes later, the specialist team were prepared for the operation and managed to get Cheung's heart beating again. Sin recounted Cheung's miraculous survival in his book, When Suffering Becomes Life , which shares the post-ICU stories of his former patients. Surviving also marked the start of a life of recovery for Cheung. 'I had to relearn writing and walking, but I picked up those skills again very quickly,' she said. Her father, Cheung Wing-hung, said: 'When I first heard Olivia was saved, I worried about taking care of her. Would she need support to use the toilet [after hospitalisation]?' While Olivia Cheung gradually recovered from her near-death experience, it continued to have an impact on her life eight years later, when she woke up one night having wet the bed and with a bleeding tongue. In a check-up, doctors found she had epilepsy as her brain lacked oxygen when her heart stopped. 'Now I cannot drive a car. The medicine for epilepsy also made me too tired to work during the first two weeks I was on it,' she said. But Cheung said that, in spite of her experiences, she remained positive and felt her problems were 'minor ones' compared with what others had gone through.


The Star
07-06-2025
- The Star
Born halfway to help kickstart baby's breathing
When the anaesthetist put Angelica Vance under for her caesarean section, she had no way of knowing what she'd encounter when she woke. If everything went perfectly, the baby would be on a ventilator and the doctors would have a plan to remove the growth that was impairing her daughter's breathing. If things went wrong, Vance might be recovering from severe bleeding, while a machine pump-ed blood through her daughter Chloe's body. 'If ECMO didn't work, she wouldn't make it,' Vance said of the blood-pumping machine called extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. 'That morning was intense.' A dangerous growth Vance, of Fort Collins, Colorado, United States, said her third pregnancy had progressed relatively normally until the final trimester. That was when pain and a jump in the circumference of her belly pointed to an excessive build-up of amniotic fluid. Her doctor removed two litres of fluid and kept her for further testing, because an increase that fast usually points to a bigger problem, she said. An ultrasound and MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) found a growth in the baby's chest and neck. This growth was keeping her from swallowing amniotic fluid and would also prevent Chloe from taking her first breath after being born. While a baby is inside and supported by the placenta, breathing isn't a concern, because the mother supplies oxygen through the umbilical cord, said Children's Hospital Colorado paediatric and fetal surgeon Dr Chris Derderian, who treated Vance and Chloe. Once the placenta detaches from the uterine wall, the baby needs to breathe on their own, giving a relatively tight window to open the airway, he said. He offered Vance an ex-utero intrapartum treatment (EXIT) procedure. During this procedure, he would partially deliver Chloe via caesarean section, and a team would work to open her airway while she remained attached to her mother. The procedure is relatively risky because the anaesthetist has to give medication to relax the uterus, preventing the placenta from tearing loose, but increasing the odds of serious bleeding. The hospital only performs about one EXIT procedure each year. These are in cases where the baby has no other options, but has a good enough chance of survival that the hospital can give the family a choice whether to accept the risks, he said. A smooth delivery After Vance went under general anaesthesia on Oct 15 (2024), Dr Derderian and his team delivered Chloe's head and shoulders by caesarean section. That started a clock of about 90 minutes that the placenta could act as life support. About 40 people from various specialities crowded into the room in case they needed to handle possible complications, including a cardiac surgeon who could open the baby's chest if the growth put too much pressure on her lungs. The airway was about the width of the tip of a pen, so the emergency medical technicians inserting the breathing tube had to use one that would push back against the pressure from the growth, Dr Derderian said. At that point, they had no way of knowing whether the airway was open, however slightly, through its full length or was completely closed at some point. If it was closed, they'd have to cut a hole in her neck to insert the tube. And then, in about 15 minutes, the worst was over. The tube went down and Chloe turned pink as the ventilator pushed oxygen into her body. Some of the specialists dispersed, while others took Chloe to the neonatal intensive care unit or sewed up Vance and prepared for her to wake. 'I don't think we have got a better scenario,' Dr Derderian said. A progressive recovery When Vance woke up, she learned that the hospital had planned another surgery to remove the growth once Chloe was three days old. That also went better than she feared, taking about two hours instead of the six that the doctors projected, she said. The growth wasn't cancerous, and it hadn't wrapped too tightly around her daughter's airway, making removal easier. Chloe spent about 10 days on a ventilator before transitioning to less-invasive oxygen support, Vance said. After six weeks in the neonatal intensive care unit, Chloe went home without oxygen, though she did need a feeding tube because of difficulty swallowing, said Vance. Fetuses essentially practise breathing and swallowing during the third trimester, and the mass around her neck limited that preparation. Now, Chloe is relatively healthy, though she still receives therapy every day to work on her swallowing and to build up her neck muscles, Vance said. Vance explained that she wanted to speak about her experience because she'd never heard of a mother who went through the same thing, and at the beginning, their family's future looked bleak. 'It feels like playing a lot of catch-up, but she has come a long way,' Vance said. 'It helps you to see something positive.' – By Meg Wingerter/The Denver Post/Tribune News Service