Originally posted by HypnoPsi [/i]
That's the central question here.
>>Is skepticism not about testing claims and asking questions? While both the videos and brain scans are inconclusive they demonstrate quite clearly that Terri should have been assessed cognitively by a Clinical/Neuropsycholgist who would have extensive knowledge of cognitive tests for self-awareness and ability to process sensory information.
The reliance on a medical "expert" with a different credential maybe just as fallacious. In testing cognition, the testor can only judge via a patient's response. But a patient may have complete cognition and be unable to make any resoponse. This is now called "Locked-In Syndrome." Some patients diagnosed PVS have come out of it, and reported they understood everything going on around them, but could not communicate response. They were "locked in".
"What is Locked-In Syndrome?
Locked-in syndrome is a rare neurological disorder characterized by complete paralysis of voluntary muscles in all parts of the body except for those that control eye movement. It may result from traumatic brain injury, diseases of the circulatory system, diseases that destroy the myelin sheath surrounding nerve cells, or medication overdose. Individuals with locked-in syndrome are conscious and can think and reason, but are unable to speak or move. The disorder leaves individuals completely mute and paralyzed. Communication may be possible with blinking eye movments"
http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/lockedinsyndrome/lockedinsyndrome.htm
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" A case is presented involving a nursing home patient who suffered a stroke that left him unable to speak or move, and thus unable to communicate his wishes except through eye movement. Steffen ponders several questions related to whether this patient should be given life-prolonging treatment, including whether he is competent to give or withhold consent, how a guardian could justify a third-party consent or refusal, and whether the attending physician could write a "do not resuscitate" order without the approval of the patient's guardian. He concludes intuitively that life-sustaining therapy should not be given in view of the patient's quality of life and the burden of his illness. Franklin disagrees, contending that it is unfair to withhold life-sustaining therapy because a patient cannot communicate and that there is an increasing number of cases on record of patients with locked-in syndrome who have recovered or have learned to communicate through Morse code or computers."
from Pub Med, Natinoal library of Medicine
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=4066303&dopt=Abstract
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Locked in Syndrome, i recovered
This article submitted by Michael Hulbert on 5/22/99.
Email Address: michael hulbert
"I am a young man aged 28. In 1994 I sustained LIS, now, May 1999, I can say I have recovered to near normal. From only been able to move my eye lids, I can now walk and have managed to secure a good job. Im very interested in working with others who may have LIS, and, more so with Medical researches who may try and discover how I recovered from a neurological point of view."
http://neuro-www.mgh.harvard.edu/forum_2/GeneralNeurologyF/5.22.9910.55AMLockedinSyn.html