Basketball

Teen Basketball Player Survives Rare Aortic Dissection After Swift Medical Response

Jackson Scarborough’s emergency surgery in Fresno highlights the critical need to treat chest pain as a potential emergency

A Race Against Time

During a routine basketball practice at a Fresno high school, 18‑year‑old Jackson Scarborough suddenly felt a sharp pain in his chest and struggled to catch his breath.

Coaches and the athletic trainer immediately recognized the seriousness of his symptoms, called emergency medical services and stayed by his side until paramedics arrived.

Emergency Response

Paramedics rushed him to a nearby hospital where doctors diagnosed an aortic dissection, a rare and often fatal tear in the wall of the aorta that can strike without warning.

Within 30 minutes of the first symptoms, surgeons performed an emergency open‑heart operation; medical staff later said the procedure had only about a 10 percent chance of success without such rapid intervention.

Recovery and Reflection

Joanna Scarborough, Jackson’s mother, later praised the coordinated response of the coaches, trainers, EMS crews and hospital staff, saying their swift actions gave her son a fighting chance.

Jackson now remains in the intensive care unit, surrounded by cards, gifts and messages of encouragement, as his family begins the long road to recovery.

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