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Man revived, airlifted after heart attack on Telluride gondola

Son called 911 from lift to report father not breathing
A woman who was injured after being bucked off a horse Sunday near Telluride was airlifted to Montrose Memorial Hospital.

A man was revived Saturday after suffering a heart attack on the Telluride Ski Resort gondola.

The 65-year-old man from Tennessee fell unconscious while in a gondola cabin leaving Mountain Village about 8:30 p.m., the San Miguel Sheriff’s Office said. He had stopped breathing.

The man’s son called 911 and was instructed by the Western Colorado Regional Dispatch Center to begin chest compressions. The gondola was shut down as the man was removed. Chest compressions continued while gondola staff retrieved and deployed an automated external defibrillator.

A CareFlight of the Rockies helicopter takes off Saturday near Telluride’s San Sophia Gondola Station with a patient who suffered a heart attack.

A Mountain Village Police Department officer arrived and assisted with chest compressions. Telluride Fire Department medics and volunteers arrived at the San Sophia Gondola Station to take over care.

“Through multiple lifesaving interventions, medics were able to restore his pulse,” according to a San Miguel Sheriff’s Office report.

Rescuers arranged for a CareFlight of the Rockies helicopter to land mid-mountain near the nature center, and the patient was flown to St. Mary’s Hospital in Grand Junction for further care.

Rescue workers also responded to a 57-year-old woman who was bucked off her horse Sunday on the Wilson Mesa Trail west of Ophir. She sustained traumatic injuries, but they were not considered life-threatening, the San Miguel Sheriff’s Office said.

San Miguel County Search and Rescue, sheriff’s deputies and Telluride Fire Protection District personnel reached the patient within 75 minutes of the initial dispatch call. A CareFlight helicopter landed nearby and took the woman to Montrose Memorial Hospital.



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