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View Full Version : What if There Is Something Going On in There?



Leon
09-28-2003, 12:03 PM
This was definitely a scary read. Not so much as scary from the outside but this entire article reminds me of one of the movies, Johny Got His Gun (http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0067277/)in which a war rookie gets blown up. He loses most of his senses but attempts to send SOS messages with his head, I believe. It was capured in Metallica's video, One (http://www.metlive.host.sk/videos.htm).

Now new research shows (http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/28/magazine/28VEGETAT.html) that people who are in coma or other paralyzing medical vegetive conditions, there IS something going on, and more so than we ever imagined.

Daniel Rios is 24 years old, with wavy black hair, a thick mustache and a glassy stare that seems to look both at you and through you. One day almost four years ago, while he was taking a shower, a blood vessel ruptured in his brain, and he collapsed on the bathroom floor. After emergency surgery, he lay in a coma for three weeks. When he finally opened his eyes, he could not speak or move his body; his head simply lolled. In the months that followed, the doctors monitoring him at the Center for Head Injuries at the J.F.K. Johnson Rehabilitation Institute in Edison, N.J., saw few signs that he had any meaningful mental life. Sometimes he looked as if he were crying. Other times his eyes would follow a mirror passed before his face. On his best days he was able to close his eyes on command. But those days were rare. For the most part he lay unresponsive, adrift in a neurological twilight.

One morning just over a year after his accident, Rios was taken to the Sloan Kettering Institute on Manhattan's East Side. There, in a dim room, a group of researchers placed a mask over his eyes, fixed headphones over his ears and guided his head into the bore of an M.R.I. machine. A 40-second loop of a recording made by Rios's sister Maria played through the headphones: she told him that she was there with him, that she loved him. As the sound entered his ears, the M.R.I. machine scanned his brain, mapping changes in activity. Several hours afterward, two researchers, Nicholas D. Schiff and Joy Hirsch, took a look at the images from the scan. They hadn't been sure what to expect -- Rios was among the first people in his condition to have his brain activity measured in this way -- but they certainly weren't expecting what they saw. ''We just stared at these images,'' recalls Schiff, an expert in consciousness disorders at Weill Medical College of Cornell University. ''There didn't seem to be anything missing.''

TheHipHopBillGates
09-28-2003, 12:23 PM
thats crazy.

joeyjoey
09-28-2003, 12:53 PM
That does remind me of the Metallica video, which always bugged me out. I'm so glad researchers are testing this; maybe one day in the future it will be possible for them to communicate when stuck in that state.

Leon
09-28-2003, 02:22 PM
It would be a start, Joey, someday I am hoping that they can CURE this.

My cousin's wife gave birth to a little boy about 4 years ago. He was normal, great, happy kid. Everyone loved him, grandparents showed videos of him during New Year's get together and everything was going fine. Until his 3rd year when, after his vaccines (perhaps another topic for another thread) he slipped from conscious world in to Austistic one.

The sad part is that he would not even look at his mom or dad and was always in his own world. To this day, and I pray I never will, do not know how someone can lose a kid this way.

I hope it's research like the above that shows the path to the treatment and then the cure.

TheHipHopBillGates
09-30-2003, 12:07 PM
my nephew is autistic and it is a very hard to deal with and understand situation. Just being around him is very humbling situation for me. I can only pray that my own children are healthy.