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View Full Version : Man wakes up after 10 years in a coma.



AlexMax
05-03-2005, 06:33 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/05/03/firefighter.speaks.ap/index.html


ORCHARD PARK, New York (AP) -- Ten years after a firefighter was left brain-damaged and mostly mute during a 1995 roof collapse, he did something that shocked his family and doctors: He perked up.

"I want to talk to my wife," Donald Herbert said out of the blue Saturday. Staff members of the nursing home where he has lived for more than seven years raced to get Linda Herbert on the telephone.

It was the first of many conversations the 44-year-old patient had with his wife, four sons and other family and friends during a 14-hour stretch, Herbert's uncle, Simon Manka said.

"How long have I been away?" Herbert asked.

"We told him almost 10 years," the uncle said. "He thought it was only three months."

Herbert was fighting a house fire December 29, 1995, when the roof collapsed, burying him under debris. After going without air for several minutes, Herbert was comatose for 2 1/2 months and has undergone therapy ever since.

News accounts in the days and years after his injury describe Herbert as blind and with little, if any, memory. Video shows him receiving physical therapy but apparently unable to communicate and with little awareness of his surroundings.

Manka declined to discuss his nephew's current condition, or whether the apparent progress was continuing. The family was seeking privacy while doctors evaluated Herbert, he said.

"He's resting comfortably," the uncle said.

As word of Herbert's progress spread, a steady stream of visitors arrived at the Father Baker Manor nursing home in this Buffalo suburb.

"He stayed up till early morning talking with his boys and catching up on what they've been doing over the last several years," firefighter Anthony Liberatore told WIVB-TV.

Herbert's sons were 14, 13, 11 and 3 when he was injured.

Staff members at the nursing facility recognized the change in Herbert, Manka said, when they heard him speaking and "making specific requests."

"The word of the day was `amazing,"' he said.

Dr. Rose Lynn Sherr of New York University Medical Center said when patients recover from brain injuries, they usually do so within two or three years.

"It's almost unheard of after 10 years," she said, "but sometimes things do happen and people suddenly improve and we don't understand why."

Manka said visitors let Herbert set the pace of the conversations and did not bring up the fire in which he was injured.

"The extent and duration of his recovery is not known at this time," Manka said. "However we can tell you he did recognize several family members and friends and did call them by name."

It's great that this guy woke up. That said....well......we all know who we're thinking about right now.

I'll give you a little hint, this guy was in a totally different state than Terri Shiavo, and his Cerebral Cortex was still intact, unlike Terri's.

carrot red
05-03-2005, 06:38 PM
It's odd he was able to hold such long conversations though. This is not the first case I've heard of, but in most of the other cases, it was a long process (that took up to years) for them to learn to talk and walk again.

Yeah, I know it's not the same thing...

Deviance
05-03-2005, 06:44 PM
Wow this is something you do not here everyday. Good that he made this through :)

Daarkseid
05-03-2005, 08:55 PM
You know, it'd be kind of neat to go comatose for a while, then wake up ten or fifteen years later. It would sort of be like travelling into the future, sort of in the style of the Terminator, in that you can't go back.

Lilith
05-04-2005, 12:18 AM
That would be weird as fucking hell. So he's been out since 1995? Good god, I hope he doesn't listen to the radio. Or watch TV.

Cloral
05-04-2005, 03:13 AM
That would be weird as fucking hell. So he's been out since 2005? Good god, I hope he doesn't listen to the radio. Or watch TV.
So he's been out for less than a year? ;)


You know, it'd be kind of neat to go comatose for a while, then wake up ten or fifteen years later. It would sort of be like travelling into the future, sort of in the style of the Terminator, in that you can't go back.
Except that if you time traveled, you'd end up dying 10 or 15 years later. It would suck to lose that much of your life to unconsciousness. Life's too short as it is.

Daarkseid
05-04-2005, 03:15 AM
Except that if you time traveled, you'd end up dying 10 or 15 years later. It would suck to lose that much of your life to unconsciousness. Life's too short as it is.

I really don't care. My life's not so good that I'd miss those 10 or 15 years.

EDIT: Although, 10 or 15 years is probably about all I have left, so maybe time travel via a coma is not a good idea for me.

Dart Zaidyer
05-04-2005, 05:44 AM
I'd like to think Mr. Shiavo is saying "whoops!" right now, but in all likelihood he's too much of a dickhead to admit it.

Archibaldo
05-04-2005, 08:06 PM
Wow, a ten year coma. I hope he wasn't looted. (If you get the the Seinfeld reference ;))