Matthew Allick was at his workplace in August 2023 when he suddenly felt so unwell that he collapsed and was rushed to hospital

Matthew Allick
Matthew Allick was considered dead for several minutes(Image: Matthew Allick/ SWNS)

A dad who “died for 10 minutes” following a heart attack has likened the ordeal to a “peaceful” sleep. Matthew Allick, 42, began feeling unwell at the end of August 2023, grappling with shortness of breath and swollen feet.

The Romford father-of-two, usually in good health, assumed his symptoms were due to adjusting to a new night shift pattern he had started. But when Matthew struggled to get up even one step at work, a workmate called an ambulance.

Shortly after arriving at the hospital, the then 40-year-old actor and care line worker collapsed from a cardiac arrest caused by a pulmonary embolism. He was deemed clinically dead for several minutes.

Matthew fell into a coma(Image: Matthew Allick/ SWNS)

Awakening from a three-day coma, Matthew remembered nothing but equated the experience to emerging from “a peaceful sleep”. He’s now sharing his tale to stress the importance of blood donations, crediting them with saving his life.

Matthew said: “It was the end of August back in 2023 and I started noticing I had swollen feet. They would swell up and then go down the next day, so I ignored it. I put it down to doing night shifts at work, thinking I wasn’t moving enough.

“But then I started getting out of breath doing simple tasks, like, if I stood up too quickly, it felt like I had just done a sprint. It never lasted long though and I considered myself fit and healthy – someone who went to the gym a few times a week and ate well – so I just thought it would go away.

“But one Saturday I was at work and a friend said, ‘Let’s go look at the new coffee machine upstairs. I remember I went to take one step and I thought, ‘I can’t climb these stairs.'”.

“I said to my friend, ‘You need to call an ambulance’. At the time, I wasn’t in pain. But I knew something was wrong.”

It began with an ‘erratic heartbeat’

Emergency responders arrived within five minutes and discovered Matthew had an erratic heartbeat. They reassured him it was likely nothing severe but took him to Hammersmith Hospital as a precautionary measure.

Once there, a medic asked Michael to score his discomfort from one to 10. He recalled: “I told him that it had been a zero before but suddenly it was an 11 out of 10.

“He said that it couldn’t be an 11, and I said, ‘Now it’s a 13.’ And then I dropped dead. I had no pulse, no heartbeat. Nothing.”

Hospital staff deployed a defibrillator and performed CPR so vigorous that it triggered internal bleeding. He was declared clinically dead for several minutes before medics brought him back and placed him in an induced coma.

Scans revealed he had blood clots the “size of a cricket ball” on his heart and lungs, prompting surgeons to perform several operations in a bid to clear them. This required using a catheter to “cut away at the clots” and numerous blood transfusions, which Matthew believes saved his life.

Doctors warned his family that should he ever wake up, he could be brain dead – owing to the extended time his brain went without oxygen. Yet when Matthew eventually came to, he was fully conscious, with just his memory being impacted.

‘It felt like I had been sleeping’

Matthew was told he had an extremely small chance of surviving(Image: Matthew Allick/ SWNS)

He said: “I don’t remember anything from when I was dead. But what I do remember is coming out of the coma and it felt like I had been sleeping. Everything was peaceful. It felt like a peaceful sleep.”

When Matthew initially awakened, he feared he was paralysed as he couldn’t move his body. However, sensation in his toes and fingers gradually began to return.

At first, Matthew also battled with memory issues – struggling to recall people’s names correctly and even identify different colours. But with time he made a full recovery.

“I slowly started to return to normal,” Matthew said. “At first, I could recognise faces but couldn’t get people’s names, and I remember I couldn’t recognise colours.

“My brother brought me an orange, and I said, what colour is that? But my brother spent time with me getting me to recite movie quotes to regain my memory.

“I also had to re-learn to sit up, how to walk, how to control my urine. It was a crazy journey.”

Matthew described it as “a huge shock” when he discovered he had suffered a heart attack – and that medics remain baffled as to why it occurred. He said: “I actually passed out when I learnt I had a heart attack. It was a huge shock.

“It just didn’t make sense. It felt like a lie. I kept thinking, ‘How could that happen to me?'”.

“I was young, I wasn’t obese, I never smoked, I wasn’t an alcoholic. I’m actually still under investigation as the doctors don’t know why it happened.”

The ‘miracle man’

Matthew revealed that whilst he was recuperating in hospital, medics dubbed him “a miracle man” – due to how astonishing it was for him to survive what he endured. He said: “When I was around the hospital a lot of doctors and nurses would point at me and say, ‘There he is’, coming up to me and saying I’m a miracle man.

“I was told only five per cent of people survive what I’ve been through. It was all incredibly rare.”

Matthew subsequently discovered how vital blood transfusions were to preserving his life and now wishes to highlight the significance of donating blood – particularly amongst Black heritage communities. According to NHS Blood and Transplant, as a Black heritage patient requiring multiple blood transfusions, Matthew’s recovery prospects would be enhanced by receiving matched blood from Black heritage donors.

A spokesperson said: “Although the blood used to treat Matthew came from a range of donors of different ethnicities, the need for more Black heritage donors to come forward to provide ethnically matched blood is well established. “.

Matthew added: “Without blood transfusions I wouldn’t be here today. We often don’t realise how critical blood donation is until we’re on the receiving end.

“Someone’s decision to give blood saved my life. That’s what I want more people to realise. I really want to raise awareness for blood donation – especially among the black community.”

Matthew says he is “75% back to normal” now but has good days and bad days. He said: “Sometimes I have chest pains and find that my feet swell up, and I think, ‘Oh no, it’s happening again.'”.

“But the great thing about Hammersmith Hospital is they’ve said to me to always come in if I’m worried, and they’ll see me straight away. On my good days I’m just living normal life. I’d say I’m 75% of what I used to be – I’ll never be completely back to normal as I’ll be on blood thinners for the rest of my life.

“But I’m just so grateful to everyone who supported me and came to see me in hospital every day and encourage me. My friends, my family, my kids, and my fiancée at the time all really showed up for me.

“At one point I remember doctors saying there were too many people in the room. It just really made me realise how lucky I am to be alive.”

Donating blood is swift, straightforward, and only requires around an hour of your time. To become a blood donor, download the NHSBT app, visit: Blood.co.uk, or call: 0300 123 23 23.

Share.
Exit mobile version