5-Year-Old Boy Who Suffered ‘Seizures’ on Disney Ride Was Saved by Passing Couple and Staff, Say Parents

Mar. 15, 2025

General view of “Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind”.Photo: Gerardo Mora/Getty

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - MAY 05: General view of the “Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind” Disney’s new ride during a media preview event at Epcot Center at Walt Disney World on May 05, 2022 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Gerardo Mora/Getty Images)

The parents of a 5-year-old boy who collapsed while riding a Disney World rollercoaster are “thankful” that strangers and staff helped save their son’s life.

Christine Tagle and Ernesto Tagle Jr. shared in asocial media postthat on Saturday, Sept. 21, their son Ernesto III “passed out” during a ride, which they identified asGuardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind— afully-enclosed rollercoasterlocated at Disney World’s Epcot — toFox 35 Orlando.

In the Friday, Sept. 27 post, they said they had found out that “he wasn’t breathing and started going into seizures.” Christine, who told Fox 35 Orlando that she had been sitting behind her son, said she had quickly realized what was happening.

“I was screaming, hitting him, and saying something’s wrong,” she recalled to the outlet.

General view of the “Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind”.Gerardo Mora/Getty

ORLANDO, FLORIDA - MAY 05: General view of the “Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind” Disney’s new ride during a media preview event at Epcot Center at Walt Disney World on May 05, 2022 in Orlando, Florida. (Photo by Gerardo Mora/Getty Images)

In the Instagram post the family shared, they said the concerned mother “started CPR along with chest compressions,” and another passing couple on the ride helped them “get our son breathing again.” They told Fox 35 Orlando that the couple happened to be a nurse and an EMT.

They also got additional help from Disney staff who brought over anAED, a medical device that can help people experiencing sudden cardiac arrest, which helped restart his heart. The family said on Instagram that Ernesto III was then “transported to the ER,” where he was stabilized.

After being transferred to another hospital via helicopter, which ran tests, it was determined that he had a rare heart condition called CPVT, which causes an “irregular heart rhythm that can be life-threatening,” perCedars Sinai. This can occur when someone is “physically active” or “emotionally stressed,” the hospital noted.

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The hospital determined that the boy would need to have surgery to place an “EV-ICD,” or “extravascular defibrillator” which treats sudden cardiac arrest and abnormal heart rhythms, on his body.

“I’m happy to say that Ernesto is doing well after surgery with no signs of brain or heart damage,” the family shared on social media. “Even better, this warrior is already home and already asking to ride his motorcycle 😂.”

Christine told Fox 35 Orlando that they “feel so lucky” that the incident “didn’t rob us of his smile and energy.”

The boy’s father, Ernesto added that they were “just so thankful everything worked out the way it did," and they “can’t thank the people who helped us enough."

source: people.com