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A teenager has said that she almost died as a result of drinking 10 Jagerbombs.
Jayde Dinsdale is now campaigning against energy drinks as a result of her near miss when she had three heart attacks.
The 19-year-old from Yeovil, Somerset, went home and slept after a night out, but once the alcohol wore off, her heart rate increased dramatically.
She ended up in a coma in hospital after her dad, Darryl, performed CPR.
A year later and she now wants more regulation on caffeine-filled energy drinks.
She told the Daily Mirror: ‘I think it is pretty bad that people sell these drinks. You’ve no idea how much caffeine is in them and how dangerous they can be.
‘I hope people will think twice about drinking energy drinks – they could be deadly. The doctors have said it was all to do with the energy drinks.’
The tourism and travel student said she spent two hours at a club on her night out. She was chatting to her mother, Natalie, as she washed her face the next morning when she collapsed.
Her mother, 38, said: ‘Her pulse was very faint and she started to go purple. She was dead on the bathroom floor. It’s a miracle that Jayde is still with us.’
Jayde had two more cardiac arrests after being taken to Yeovil Hospital, where she spent three weeks recovering.
Her family believes the caffeine only kicked in once the effects of the alcohol, which slows down the heart, wore off.
Energy drinks have previously been linked to health problems in the young, including the death of Joshua Merrick, 19, from Manchester, last year.
Red Bull declined to comment but, in the past, has insisted a can only contains the same caffeine as a cup of coffee.
If any of you drink energy drinks, does this article have any impact as to whether or not you'll keep drinking them? Why/Why not?