A doctor says
people can be revived several hours after they have seemingly died. Should this
change the way we think about death?
Carol
Brothers can't recall the exact moment she died.
"I know
it must have been a Friday around lunchtime, because we'd got back from
shopping," the 63-year old says. "I can't remember getting out of the
car."
Her husband
David has much clearer memories of that day three months ago. He opened the
front door of their Wiltshire home and saw Carol lying down, gasping for
breath, the colour rapidly draining from her face.
Carol had had
a cardiac arrest - her heart had stopped beating. Luckily, an elderly neighbour
knew the rudiments of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and quickly began to
work on her chest.
Paramedics
soon took over, and at a point between 30 and 45 minutes after her collapse -
no-one noted the exact time - Carol's heart started beating again.
"While
45 minutes is absolutely remarkable and a lot of people would have written her
off, we now know there are people who have been brought back, three, four, five
hours after they've died and have led remarkably good quality lives," says
Dr Sam Parnia, the director of resuscitation research at Stony Brook University
in New York.
Most people
regard cardiac arrest as synonymous with death, he says. But it is not a final
threshold.
Doctors have
long believed that if someone is without a heartbeat for longer than about 20
minutes, the brain usually suffers irreparable damage. But this can be avoided,
Parnia says, with good quality CPR and careful post-resuscitation care.
He says it is
vital that chest compressions occur at the right rate and force and that
patients are not over-ventilated. CPR would be considerably prolonged, with
machines doing the work.
Doctors also
have new ways to care for patients after their hearts have been restarted.
As Parnia
explains in his new book the Lazarus Effect (the US title is Erasing Death),
after the brain stops receiving a regular supply of oxygen through the
circulation of blood it does not instantly perish but goes into a sort of
hibernation, a way of fending off its own process of decay.
The process
of "waking up" this hibernated brain may well be the riskiest time of
all, since oxygen can potentially be toxic at this stage.
The effect,
Parnia says, is like that of a tsunami following an earthquake, and the best
response is to cool patients down, from 37C to 32C.
"Cooling
therapy, the reason it works so well, is that it actually slows down brain cell
decay," says Parnia.
This is where
Carol Brothers was again in luck.
After her
heart was restarted, she was put on a helicopter where a doctor cooled her down
using the frozen food she had just bought at the supermarket.
She was
ultimately put in the care of Dr Jerry Nolan, an intensive care consultant at
Bath's Royal United Hospital. This was yet more luck - Nolan co-wrote best
practice guidelines for the UK Resuscitation Council, which he chairs.
By this time,
Carol was in a coma. As the next few days passed, none of the signs were good -
seizures and ominous EEG scans indicated that she might be brain dead. It
looked like she had survived the earthquake but been left devastated by the
tsunami.
On the Monday
following Carol's collapse, Nolan advised David and his daughter Maxine that
the kindest thing might be to allow Carol to die. They agreed.
But when
Maxine visited the hospital again three days later she found her mother awake
and looking around.
"She
said three little words to me," recalls Maxine. "She said: 'I'm
coming home.' It was a little tiny faint whisper."
Cooling
therapy is changing everything. Whereas Carol's seizures and low brain activity
would once have been seen as unambiguously bad signs, such symptoms may be
compatible with a good recovery.
"We're
much more uncertain than we thought we were," says Nolan, adding that
research groups across the world were urgently looking at cases like Carol's to
draw up new guidelines.
Parnia says
the guidelines already in circulation are not routinely enforced by hospitals.
"Carol
was very lucky that she ended up in a hospital with such an eminent
expert," he says. "In the US and the UK there is absolutely zero
regulation regarding the quality of care that somebody like Carol should
receive."
Nolan stops
short of saying that Carol was brought back from the dead. Hospitals do not
declare death, he says, until they have ruled out all processes that can be
reversed. However, he agrees with Parnia that our concept of death needs
updating.
"We used
to think death was a sort of sudden event - we stop the oxygen going to the
brain and after a few minutes that was that. But actually, we know that the
dying process at the cellular level goes on for a period of time."
The
increasingly blurred line between life and death is prompting metaphysical
questions as well as medical ones.
Parnia has
become fascinated by patients' accounts of being "near death", which
he says about 10% of survivors have.
Sources :
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-22154552
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