A man has described the double heartbreak of losing his son and his wife to the same
Craig Murray, 59, said he feels "robbed" following the deaths of his son Chris and wife Linda, both of whom had been diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a heart condition which is often inherited.
Chris Murray was just 22 when he collapsed and died at work in 2017, having suffered a sudden . Just seven years later in May 2024 Mrs Murray had been taken to hospital where doctors tried to relieve fluid retention she was suffering because of her medication, but her condition deteriorated and she died on May 30.
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Mr Murray, from Glasgow, said the loss of his wife was made even harder by the fact she would have become a grandmother this year, with the couple's son Craig Jnr and his wife due to have a baby in the summer. Mr Murray said: "She is due on what would have been Linda's 59th birthday, on July 20."
He went on to say: "That's given us some comfort. It was like a message or a sign from her. I feel robbed, having lost my wife and son to heart disease. I'm not the victim, Linda and Chris are, but they still had so much to do. Linda would have loved to have been a grandma; she would have been the best grandparent. She'll never get to see her grandchild and that would have given her such a boost."
Mr Murray said his wife had been diagnosed with HCM when she was 30 and their son was suspected of having it from the age of three, but they had not realised the "severity" of the condition. He added: "Linda's mum had the same condition as her and she died two years before her, having experienced the same difficult symptoms.
"It also took Linda's granddad, and Chris. She knew she had a ticking time bomb and that we could lose her at any time. She had to be really brave."
Following their son's death, the Murray family became ardent supporters of the British Heart Foundation (BHF), raising thousands of pounds for the charity. Mr Murray said: "The research BHF funds can help other people to have a different outcome. If that could be Linda and Chris's legacy, helping to inspire fundraising or some sort of breakthrough with these heart conditions, it would mean a lot."
Mr Murray was speaking ahead of the launch of the BHF's new 10-year strategy which aims to "revolutionise" the way heart disease and stroke are prevented and treated.
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