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‘Miracle Man’ thanks first responders who saved his life after a heart attack

David Preuss shares a hug with Donna Lynn, a volunteer EMT with VB Rescue, at Virginia Beach Department of Emergency Medical Services headquarters on Thursday, March 27, 2025. Lynn was part of the team credited with saving Preuss’ life when he went into cardiac arrest in 2023. (Kendall Warner / The Virginian-Pilot)
David Preuss shares a hug with Donna Lynn, a volunteer EMT with VB Rescue, at Virginia Beach Department of Emergency Medical Services headquarters on Thursday, March 27, 2025. Lynn was part of the team credited with saving Preuss’ life when he went into cardiac arrest in 2023. (Kendall Warner / The Virginian-Pilot)
Eliza Noe
UPDATED:

VIRGINIA BEACH — Tears flowed and tissues were passed around as David Preuss thanked the men and women who saved his life.

A half-dozen paramedics, dispatchers and first responders stood in line to meet Preuss and his family, each getting a big hug. They met Thursday for the first time since his cardiac arrest more than a year ago.

“This is a very healing process for us, finally seeing everybody,” Preuss, 61, said of the meeting at Virginia Beach’s emergency services headquarters.

On the morning of October 21, 2023, Preuss had a sudden heart attack in his Virginia Beach home. Wife Lisa and son Tyler immediately called 911, and staff at the Emergency Communications center guided her through chest compressions. Within six minutes of her call, first responders arrived.

EMTs quickly worked to save Preuss. He said paramedics used defibrillators on his chest eight times and administered epinephrine, or adrenaline, five times to help revive him. The first responders introduced a LUCAS machine, a mechanical chest compression device, into the mix, as well.

During cardiac arrests, time is of the essence. CPR helps keep the heart pumping and oxygen moving through the body. Within minutes of no oxygen, there is a risk of brain damage. Should that occur, prognosis can quickly become grim. Resuscitation efforts were continued for more than a half-hour before Preuss’s pulse returned.

Lisa Preuss, through tears, said she and her family have thought of those first responders, doctors and nurses every day and prayed for their safety. David Preuss said the time with his family since that day has been “a road I never thought I’d travel again.”

“While I lay unconscious, (first responders) showed compassion to my family,” David Preuss said. “(Their) dedication to the profession isn’t just a job. It’s a gift that ripples through families and communities. Every shift, every call, every patient matters.”

While at Sentara Princess Anne Hospital, his lungs collapsed and one of his kidneys began to fail. His blood had gone septic, so the ICU placed him under a medically induced hypothermia, or a coma, for two days.

“My body seemed determined to give up,” Preuss said.

But the staff would not let that happen, he said. During his stay, they called him “The Miracle Man,” and Preuss said he is thankful to each person that became part of his healing journey. Donna Lynn, a volunteer EMT with Virginia Beach Volunteer Rescue Squad, received a heart pin for her role in performing life-saving CPR.

“When (first responders) arrived, I wasn’t exactly present, but every breath I take now, every moment I share with my family — that shouldn’t exist,” Preuss said. “It all came from (their) ability to make all the right decisions that morning.

“But what I want (responders) to know is that their impact extends far beyond just saving my life or not. (They) saved a family, a son from losing a father, a wife from losing her husband… They didn’t just save a patient, they saved a family.”

Eliza Noe, [email protected]

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