Lets see positive to negative ='s .............Discharge.............
Pokemon Go player struck by lightning, nearly killed (Sidle Show of 51 outcome's from playing Pokemon Go)
http://www.sfgate.com/technology/article/Pokemon-Go-player-struck-by-lightning-nearly-8424620.php
12:31 pm, Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Pokemon Go Lightning Survivor Speaks Out
_http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/pokemon-lightning-survivor-speaks-40887303
Pokemon Go player struck by lightning, nearly killed (Sidle Show of 51 outcome's from playing Pokemon Go)
http://www.sfgate.com/technology/article/Pokemon-Go-player-struck-by-lightning-nearly-8424620.php
12:31 pm, Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Fifteen-year-old Cameron Poimboeuf was playing Pokemon Go with his buddy Jansen Tabor on Florida's Sand Key Beach when "everything went black."
A lightning bolt hit him squarely in the back, knocking the North Carolina boy unconscious. The electrical surge coursed through his body and down his leg. His heart stopped.
The bolt also struck Jansen in the leg, but he wasn't seriously injured.
Fortunately, three good Samaritans, including a nurse, happened to be nearby, according to WFTS Tampa Bay. They performed CPR on Cameron until EMS responders took over.
"We were also told from the cardiologist it was the level of expert CPR that he got that made the difference," Cameron's mother Karen Poimboeuf told the ABC affiliate. "They did not give up after minutes of CPR, that they kept working and kept working and kept working."
But while his heart was resuscitated, what happened to his brain wasn't immediately clear.
Cameron did not regain consciousness for three days after the injury on July 19. He spent almost a week in intensive care. Doctors initially were not optimistic, as lightning-strike victims often suffer permanent neurological damage.
When he did wake up, he was surrounded by his family. But he couldn't move or remember much of what happened before he was struck.
"Everyone was standing there looking at me. I was trying to figure out if I was hurting or anything, but my body was pretty much numb," Cameron told WFTS.
Now back in North Carolina, Cameron is walking again and says he's about 70 percent recovered.
"I am still a little bit dizzy, but it is a lot better," he said.
Pokemon Go Lightning Survivor Speaks Out
_http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/pokemon-lightning-survivor-speaks-40887303