Sunday, October 28, 2007

Chicago Marathon Cancelled

10/19

The Chicago Marathon was stopped short for the first time Oct. 7 as the heat and humidity put over 300 runners in ambulances, hospitalized 49 and took the life of a 35-year-old-man.

Chad Schieber of Midland, Mich was pronounced dead after collapsing in the 18th mile. Four runners have died in the LaSalle Bank Chicago Marathon’s 30-year existence, but never have so many been reduced to unconsciousness or suffered nausea, heart palpitations and dizziness as on Sunday.

“It was absolutely insane,” said Trinity International University (TIU) senior Laura Della Torre. She was one of a handful of TIU Athletic Training students that volunteered at the race-sponsored aid stations.

Condell Medical Center of Libertyville employs Certified Athletic Trainers for the Marathon. TIU’s Athletic Training Program Director Karl Glass works in conjunction with Condell to provide TIU Athletic Training students the opportunity for monitored volunteer work and experience to earn clinical education hours, a requirement for graduation and to sit for the National Athletic Training Certification exam.

Senior Athletic Training students Kate Nelson and Christy Bullmore could be found sweating alongside Della Torre between miles 17 and 18, running quarter-mile sprints with wheelchairs to pick up and haul collapsed runners to the medical tent.

Early on, about every 15 minutes a dizzy runner would have a sit at the tent. But that turned into an average of two-dozen people at any given time until the race was cancelled at 11:30, said Della Torre.

Three cots, five chairs and the floor at this station were shared by a consistent surge of dehydrated runners. The volunteers responded to all needs. They notified emergencies, monitored temperatures and treated rolled ankles. They distributed Vaseline and Band Aids for common chaffing and blisters, and gels, power bars, and water for nutrition and hydration.

The highest temperature Della Torre took that day was 108 degrees. The man was unresponsive, unconscious and injected with two IVs, one called a chemical-seven solution because it contains essential fluids beyond the normal sodium-chlorine saline.

Brain cells are destroyed at such high body temperatures. Ambulances of cities surrounding Chicago responded to the surplus of calls and it took 45 minutes for one to retrieve the athlete now reduced to a comatose patient, said Della Torre.

Thirty-five thousand, eight-hundred sixty-seven began the Chicago Marathon and 24,933 finished it, according to race officials.

TIU student Graham Hallen was about four hours into the race at mile 23 when a marathon official with a megaphone announced, “The Marathon has been canceled. Please walk.” Graham completed the race at 5 hours 6 minutes and 10 seconds. He survived the heat, but had surgery on his foot the following Thursday.

Athletic Director Patrick Gilliam finished his 6th marathon at 5:25:28, and TIU student Danielle Plantz finished her (first?) at 5:51:04. Both finished over an hour after their anticipated time because of the cancellation.

“Running is now a felony. Please walk,” said another course official.

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