X-Message-Number: 22719
From: "Mark Plus" <>
Subject: Reason: Is Terri Schiavo Dead?
Date: Thu, 23 Oct 2003 21:07:03 -0700

This has some relevance to the legal status of cryonauts [Mark Plus]:

http://www.reason.com/links/links102303.shtml

October 23, 2003


October 23, 2003


Is Terri Schiavo Dead?

Eat, drink, and vegetate

Ronald Bailey





Terri Schiavo has been in a persistent vegetative state since 1990. Her 
husband wants to withdraw the nutrition and hydration her body has been 
receiving and allow her body to die. Her mother, father, and sister and now 
Florida Governor Jeb Bush want to continue supplying her body with food and 
water until... what? She wakes up? Dies of pneumonia?

What is a persistent vegetative state? According to the National Institute 
for Neurological Disorders and Stroke people in PVS "have lost their 
thinking abilities and awareness of their surroundings, but retain 
non-cognitive function and normal sleep patterns. Even though those in a 
persistent vegetative state lose their higher brain functions, other key 
functions such as breathing and circulation remain relatively intact. 
Spontaneous movements may occur, and the eyes may open in response to 
external stimuli. They may even occasionally grimace, cry, or laugh. 
Although individuals in a persistent vegetative state may appear somewhat 
normal, they do not speak and they are unable to respond to commands." 
People suffering from PVS can generally be distinguished from afflicted but 
cognitively intact patients who suffer from "locked-in syndrome" by the fact 
that "locked in" patients can track visual stimuli and use eye blinks for 
communication.

According to most neurological experts, Terri Schiavo is definitely PVS her 
eyes do not really track visual stimuli and she cannot communicate using eye 
blinks. However, Terri Schiavo's parents have posted several short ambiguous 
video clips online which are meant to show that Ms. Schiavo responds to 
stimuli. But what they show seems to fit an AMA's report of how PVS patients 
can respond to environmental cues without being aware. Specifically, the 
report notes, "Despite an 'alert demeanor', observation and examination 
repeatedly fail to demonstrate coherent speech, comprehension of the words 
of examiners or attendants, or any capacity to initiate or make consistently 
purposeful movements. Movements are largely confined to reflex withdrawals 
or posturing in response to noxious or other external stimuli. Since neither 
visual nor auditory signals require cortical integrity to stimulate brief 
orienting reflexes, some vegetative patients may turn the head or dart the 
eyes toward a noise or moving objects. However, PVS patients neither fixate 
upon nor consistently follow moving objects with the eyes, nor do they show 
other than startle responses to loud stimuli. They blink when air movements 
stimulate the cornea but not in the presence of visual threats per se."

Ms. Schiavo has been in this state for 13 years. What are her chances of 
recovering at least some awareness? Minnesota neurologist Ronald Cranford 
told the Washington Post, "There has never been a documented case of someone 
recovering after having been in a persistent vegetative state for more than 
3 months. However, the journal Brain Injury reported the case, of a 
26-year-old woman who, after being diagnosed as suffering from a persistent 
vegetative state for six months, recovered consciousness and, though 
severely disabled, is largely cognitively intact. However, it is generally 
agreed that if a patient doesn't become responsive before six months, his or 
her prognosis is extremely poor. A report on PVS by the Australian National 
Health and Medical Research Council finds that "patients in a state of 
post-coma unresponsiveness may emerge from it to become responsive," that 
"the probability of emergence becomes progressively less over time," and 
that "there is general agreement that emergence is less likely in older 
people, and in the victims of hypoxic brain damage." Terri Schiavo is the 
way she is because oxygen was cut off to her brain for 14 minutes; in other 
words, she suffered severe hypoxic brain damage.

So is Terri Schiavo still alive? The odds are way against it. It's time that 
her long-suffering parents and the grandstanding politicians let her go in 
peace.




Ronald Bailey is Reason's science correspondent.



Eat, drink, and vegetate

Ronald Bailey





Terri Schiavo has been in a persistent vegetative state since 1990. Her 
husband wants to withdraw the nutrition and hydration her body has been 
receiving and allow her body to die. Her mother, father, and sister and now 
Florida Governor Jeb Bush want to continue supplying her body with food and 
water until... what? She wakes up? Dies of pneumonia?

What is a persistent vegetative state? According to the National Institute 
for Neurological Disorders and Stroke people in PVS "have lost their 
thinking abilities and awareness of their surroundings, but retain 
non-cognitive function and normal sleep patterns. Even though those in a 
persistent vegetative state lose their higher brain functions, other key 
functions such as breathing and circulation remain relatively intact. 
Spontaneous movements may occur, and the eyes may open in response to 
external stimuli. They may even occasionally grimace, cry, or laugh. 
Although individuals in a persistent vegetative state may appear somewhat 
normal, they do not speak and they are unable to respond to commands." 
People suffering from PVS can generally be distinguished from afflicted but 
cognitively intact patients who suffer from "locked-in syndrome" by the fact 
that "locked in" patients can track visual stimuli and use eye blinks for 
communication.

According to most neurological experts, Terri Schiavo is definitely PVS her 
eyes do not really track visual stimuli and she cannot communicate using eye 
blinks. However, Terri Schiavo's parents have posted several short ambiguous 
video clips online which are meant to show that Ms. Schiavo responds to 
stimuli. But what they show seems to fit an AMA's report of how PVS patients 
can respond to environmental cues without being aware. Specifically, the 
report notes, "Despite an 'alert demeanor', observation and examination 
repeatedly fail to demonstrate coherent speech, comprehension of the words 
of examiners or attendants, or any capacity to initiate or make consistently 
purposeful movements. Movements are largely confined to reflex withdrawals 
or posturing in response to noxious or other external stimuli. Since neither 
visual nor auditory signals require cortical integrity to stimulate brief 
orienting reflexes, some vegetative patients may turn the head or dart the 
eyes toward a noise or moving objects. However, PVS patients neither fixate 
upon nor consistently follow moving objects with the eyes, nor do they show 
other than startle responses to loud stimuli. They blink when air movements 
stimulate the cornea but not in the presence of visual threats per se."

Ms. Schiavo has been in this state for 13 years. What are her chances of 
recovering at least some awareness? Minnesota neurologist Ronald Cranford 
told the Washington Post, "There has never been a documented case of someone 
recovering after having been in a persistent vegetative state for more than 
3 months. However, the journal Brain Injury reported the case, of a 
26-year-old woman who, after being diagnosed as suffering from a persistent 
vegetative state for six months, recovered consciousness and, though 
severely disabled, is largely cognitively intact. However, it is generally 
agreed that if a patient doesn't become responsive before six months, his or 
her prognosis is extremely poor. A report on PVS by the Australian National 
Health and Medical Research Council finds that "patients in a state of 
post-coma unresponsiveness may emerge from it to become responsive," that 
"the probability of emergence becomes progressively less over time," and 
that "there is general agreement that emergence is less likely in older 
people, and in the victims of hypoxic brain damage." Terri Schiavo is the 
way she is because oxygen was cut off to her brain for 14 minutes; in other 
words, she suffered severe hypoxic brain damage.

So is Terri Schiavo still alive? The odds are way against it. It's time that 
her long-suffering parents and the grandstanding politicians let her go in 
peace.




Ronald Bailey is Reason's science correspondent.

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