![Luton's Tom Lockyer remains hopeful he can play again professionally after having a cardiac arrest. (AP PHOTO) Luton's Tom Lockyer remains hopeful he can play again professionally after having a cardiac arrest. (AP PHOTO)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/f62484e8-542e-4089-b05f-f92978a28b20.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Luton Town captain Tom Lockyer says his heart stopped for more than two and a half minutes when he suffered a cardiac arrest in a Premier League game at Bournemouth on December 16, but he is still hoping that doctors give him the all clear to keep playing professionally.
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The 29-year-old defender collapsed in the 59th minute at Vitality Stadium, resulting in the game being abandoned. Lockyer was discharged from the hospital five days later following a successful procedure to fit an implantable cardioverter defibrillator.
"Two minutes, 40 seconds I was out for," Lockyer told Sky Sports in an interview aired on Sunday (Monday AEDT) before the Hatters' EPL game against Manchester United.
"I needed the defibrillator to shock me back. A massive thank you to the paramedics and club doctors involved, because without them I wouldn't be here."
Lockyer also collapsed during May's Championship playoff final victory over Coventry City at Wembley Stadium, leading him to undergo surgery to correct an atrial fibrillation.
He said he knew straight away that his collapse at Bournemouth was more serious.
"I was running up to the halfway line and went really light-headed. I remember thinking 'I will be OK in a second' and eventually I wasn't," he said.
"I woke up and the paramedics and everyone were everywhere. It happened in May as well, but I knew instantly this was different. Last time I woke up from almost a dream, this time I woke up from a nothingness. Straight away there was a little bit more panic from the paramedics, physios and club doctors. I was a little bit disorientated, couldn't speak or move, I was just trying to work out what was happening.
"While that was going on I remember thinking 'I could be dying here' and it's quite a surreal thought thinking that and not being able to move and respond."
Lockyer said he still needs to undergo more tests before doctors have a firm grasp about whether it's safe for him to resume his playing career.
"We will be dictated to by the medical staff and specialists, but if there was a chance I could play again, and I'm not going to do anything against the specialists' recommendations, then I would love to," he said.
United's Christian Eriksen successfully resumed playing after being fitted with an ICD following his collapse at the European Championship in 2021 while playing for Denmark.
Australian Associated Press