Boy Struck in Chest With Baseball Dies

ByABC News via logo
May 21, 2002, 10:17 PM

May 22 -- Seven-year-old Nader Parman II was playing baseball in his own front yard in Marietta, Ga., when a baseball struck him in the chest at just the wrong moment, killing him.

The ball hit Nader in the area right above his heart, at exactly the right millisecond to cause a fatal abnormal heart rhythm and trigger cardiac arrest. The injury is rare, but not unheard of. Doctors see as many as two dozen cases like Nader's each year, in which the victim has a healthy heart.

The batted ball caused Nader to have what's medically known as commotio cordis a syndrome that results from a blunt impact to the chest which leads to cardiac arrest.

Some commotio cordis deaths have been caused by a blow from a hollow plastic bat, but the most common cause is from being struck by a ball or puck during organized sports.

Nader, a first-grader, had been playing baseball with a 15-year-old neighbor boy who lives on the street. The boy told police that he had intended to hit a pop fly for the younger boy, but instead he accidentally ended up hitting a line drive that hit Nader in the chest. The boy's father, Nader Parman, dashed out of the door right after his son was injured.

"He ran outside as quickly as he could, picked up my son, brought him inside the house and immediately started administering CPR, calling 911," Sherri Parman told Good Morning America. But it wasn't enough.

Hearts Rhythm Thrown Off

When a child collapses from commotio cordis, CPR techniques are of little use, experts say. A portable defibrillator, like the ones used to resuscitate adult heart attack victims, might have saved Nader if it was used within the first three minutes after it happened. But without it, even immediate first aid was too late.

"After three to five minutes, if you cannot get the individual back into their regular rhythm, it's unlikely that they'll survive," said Dr. Mark Link, associate professor of medicine at Tufts New England Medical Center in Boston.