'Someone was looking out': Woman having medical emergency pulls into closed fire station, but someone was there
MENOMONEE FALLS, Wis. (CBS 58) -- Sherry Kyles is convinced Battalion Fire Chief Kurt Harthun saved her life, and on Monday, she got to meet him for the first time since her Oct. 28 emergency.
Kyles described having a rapid heartbeat and lightheadedness that wouldn't go away that afternoon. So, she decided to drive about 15 minutes to the Froedtert hospital in Menomonee Falls, where she works in the cancer center.
In retrospect, Kyles said she knows it probably wasn't the best idea.
"I felt that I had enough time," she said. "And I felt that it was mild enough I could make it to the hospital."
Instead, Kyles said her condition only got worse as she drove west on Good Hope Road.
"My vision was so blurry. I was sweating so bad," she said. "I couldn't even really see my phone."
The last straw was when Kyles blew a red light at Lilly Road. Kyles said she didn't mean to, but she was aware enough to realize what had just happened.
"God spoke to me," she said. "And he said, 'Make a U-Turn and get to the fire department.'"
Kyles pulled into Station 3. She had no idea the firehouse is currently closed for remodeling. At first, Kyles said she parked outside the building and began honking her horn.
"Nobody came out, so I went inside," she said. "I just start yelling for help and start beating on the ambulances to get someone's attention."
Battalion Chief Kurt Harthun said had Kyles arrived five minutes later, no one would've been at the station. Instead, Harthun and another firefighter were there finishing up paperwork after a training session.
"All of a sudden, we heard a car honking outside. And we kind of looked at each other and went over," Harthun said. "All of a sudden, we heard a voice inside cause the overhead door was open."
Harthun said they went into the bay and saw Kyles, who looked ill. They checked her heart rate and saw it was over 200 beats per minute, a dangerously high rate for someone who hadn't been exercising.
Further testing revealed Kyles was experiencing supraventricular tachycardia, known as SVT. It's a condition where the heart is beating so fast, it fails to get oxygenated blood out to the body.
It's not a heart attack; that is when blood flow to the heart is restricted. Harthun said SVT can be treated fairly easily; often times, people can slow their heart rate through breathing techniques, lying down or putting ice water on their face.
Other times, though, medical attention is necessary. Harthun said if Kyles didn't pull into the station, she might've passed out and crashed her car.
Had no one been at the fire station, Kyles could've fainted there, and her life would've been in danger depending on how long it took someone to notice her.
"Fate, divine intervention, call it what you will," Harthun said. "Someone was looking out for Sherry."
There's yet another layer to the story. The firefighters administered IV treatment, which lowered Kyles' heart rate until an ambulance could arrive.
When those paramedics showed up, Kyles immediately recognized one of them; he was one of her son's childhood friends.
"It just was like...I've known this kid since he was like-," Kyles said, gesturing with her hand to mimic the height of a child. "And he was like, 'I'm not gonna let anything happen to you.'"
In the days following her heart scare, Kyles said she went to the firehouse three times in hopes of finding Harthun. After contacting CBS 58, a reporter arranged for both Harthun and Kyles to meet at the station Monday afternoon.
Kyles expressed her gratitude while sitting on the back of the same firetruck where she was treated nine days earlier.
"Even though it's your job, you went above and beyond to just secure me," she told Harthun.
Harthun said he was inspired to take paramedic training when, as a member of the Milwaukee Fire Department, he saw medics revive a patient who was in SVT.
Even as a veteran firefighter of 35 years, Harthun said he was also moved by the experience with Kyles.
"These are the things I call the 'a-ha moments,' where you have truly made a difference in somebody's life," he said. "And they can go on to continue living their life."