Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It strikes me as very odd that a death caused by drug-induced cardiac arrest would involve a temporary pacemaker. Those are for arrhythmia, not for outright cardiac arrest.
Nobody knows whether drugs were involved. The drugs she’d done in the past may have damaged her heart, plus bad genes.
This was the case for a family friend who died in his 40s. Had been clean for years but died of heat stroke because his body was so badly damaged from decades of prior drug use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It strikes me as very odd that a death caused by drug-induced cardiac arrest would involve a temporary pacemaker. Those are for arrhythmia, not for outright cardiac arrest.
Nobody knows whether drugs were involved. The drugs she’d done in the past may have damaged her heart, plus bad genes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Damar Hamlin incident got me thinking. He got attention in less than a minute and happily survived. This isn't typical.
Many people are likely home when this happens like Lisa Marie, and often home alone. Homes don't typically have defibrillators or trained medical professionals. The death rate from out of hospital cardiac arrests is huge.
After the Hamlin incident, doctors said your best bet for surviving such a thing is to have it happen at a major sporting event, or airport.
I think it also helps to be a to notch athlete, in your 20s with no history of drug use. There is literally no comparison.
And to get cpr and a defibrillator within a minute of your heart stopping. Almost nobody who has cardiac arrest at home and has to wait for an ambulance to arrive to have their heart shocked back into rhythm survives at all. Or if they do, they often have a terrible anoxic brain injury.
Hamlin and Presly went into cardiac arrest for entirely different reasons. Their situations have little in common. Defibrillators and CPR are only going to be successful on certain causes of cardiac arrest.
We don’t know why Presley went into cardiac arrest. It may have just been some sort of arrhythmia in which case quick cpr and a shock likely would have saved her, like it did Hamlin. No matter the reason for cardiac arrest, the best chance of survival is immediate cpr and defibrillation to prevent the brain from being without oxygen too long.
She has family history of heart issues. This isn't complicated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that Lisa Marie has a half-brother from her mother’s second marriage. I always thought she was Priscilla’s only child. So sad for the whole family.
I didn’t know she married again!
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that Lisa Marie has a half-brother from her mother’s second marriage. I always thought she was Priscilla’s only child. So sad for the whole family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She looked unwell a few days ago, even heavily made up---
Looks like Elvira. Drugs likely. How old is she. She looks ancient here.
What is wrong with you?
Np. I think it's important to use real world examples of how awful drug addiction can be -- I would bet it was all prescribed too. Women in their 30s-50s need to see that their "functioning" addictions to pills and alcohol will kill them young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She looked unwell a few days ago, even heavily made up---
Looks like Elvira. Drugs likely. How old is she. She looks ancient here.
What is wrong with you?
Anonymous wrote:I didn’t know that Lisa Marie has a half-brother from her mother’s second marriage. I always thought she was Priscilla’s only child. So sad for the whole family.
Anonymous wrote:It strikes me as very odd that a death caused by drug-induced cardiac arrest would involve a temporary pacemaker. Those are for arrhythmia, not for outright cardiac arrest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Damar Hamlin incident got me thinking. He got attention in less than a minute and happily survived. This isn't typical.
Many people are likely home when this happens like Lisa Marie, and often home alone. Homes don't typically have defibrillators or trained medical professionals. The death rate from out of hospital cardiac arrests is huge.
After the Hamlin incident, doctors said your best bet for surviving such a thing is to have it happen at a major sporting event, or airport.
I think it also helps to be a to notch athlete, in your 20s with no history of drug use. There is literally no comparison.
And to get cpr and a defibrillator within a minute of your heart stopping. Almost nobody who has cardiac arrest at home and has to wait for an ambulance to arrive to have their heart shocked back into rhythm survives at all. Or if they do, they often have a terrible anoxic brain injury.
Hamlin and Presly went into cardiac arrest for entirely different reasons. Their situations have little in common. Defibrillators and CPR are only going to be successful on certain causes of cardiac arrest.
We don’t know why Presley went into cardiac arrest. It may have just been some sort of arrhythmia in which case quick cpr and a shock likely would have saved her, like it did Hamlin. No matter the reason for cardiac arrest, the best chance of survival is immediate cpr and defibrillation to prevent the brain from being without oxygen too long.
I read her ex Keough found her when he returned from dropping off her twins at school, so there is no way to know how long she was unconscious or how long she had no been breathing or without a heartbeat. Her brain may have been deprived of oxygen for a very long time.
I thought the housekeeper found her body?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My $$$ is on drugs being the culprit - hope they release the toxicology report
They often don’t for celebrities but they should. Like the actor who died of “complications from sleep apnea” when the complication was DRUGS.