Heart attack at marathon finish line doesn't stop Montreal man
Stéphane Demers will run this weekend, alongside the doctor who saved his life
When Stéphane Demers laces up his sneakers and takes his mark at today's Oasis Rock 'n' Roll marathon in Montreal, he's hoping he'll remember crossing the finish line.
"Hopefully it'll be really different than last year," said Demers, an avid jogger for the past decade.
The 46-year-old Montrealer, who now lives in Moncton, N.B., took part in the charity race last year, but 50 metres from the finish line, he collapsed.
I don't remember anything that happened to me.- Stéphane Demers, heart attack survivor
"I don't remember the last 15 minutes of my race, so I don't remember anything that happened to me just a couple of feet before the [finish] line," Demers told CBC News.
He doesn't remember it because he had no pulse and no heartbeat.
Emergency medical teams ran over to him and rushed him across the finish line on a stretcher as they headed towards the medical tent on-site.
After eight minutes of CPR, cardiac massages and the use of an automatic external defibrillator, Demers' heart was beating again.
"We stabilized him and then transferred him to the hospital," said Dr. François de Champlain, the marathon's medical director.
The incident hit home with de Champlain, who founded and heads up the Jacques de Champlain Foundation in honour of his father, who died under similar circumstances.
De Champlain's father was biking in Quebec's Eastern Townships in July 2009 when he suffered a heart attack. In the rural area, there was no first responder service and no quick access to a defibrillator — which de Champlain said made all the difference in Demers' case.
"They save lives, it's proven. Stéphane's life was saved by that machine," de Champlain said.
He went to visit Demers in hospital the next day, and they struck up a friendship.
'It was really emotional'
Demers underwent bypass surgery at the McGill University Health Centre and was hospitalized for five weeks. One of his arteries was 90 per cent blocked.
During his recovery, he decided he wanted to watch the news footage of his collapse at the finish line.
"I was trying to understand what happened because I didn't remember anything.… It was really emotional. I had to stop it a couple of times," Demers said. "Normally I am not someone who's really emotional, but that time was difficult."
Demers said his partner of 28 years, Lynne Nadeau, and his two children, encouraged him get back on his feet.
Now, a year later, Demers runs five kilometres, three to four times per week.
He decided to give the event another shot, but with a few conditions.
He'll only be running the 5K on Sunday, and he'll have a running buddy: Demers will run alongside the doctor who saved his life at last year's event.
Demers said he can't wait to see his wife waiting for him at the finish line.
"For me, it's a way to create new memories of the race."
With files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak