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View Full Version : Australian hospital is bringing clinically dead people back to life... V



Ponce
19th May 2013, 09:13 AM
First time that I have read anything about this machine, I wonder if we have it here in the states.
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Doctors at the Alfred Hospital in Melbourne have a knack for resurrection. Thanks to a combination of two resuscitation techniques, the Australian team has successfully revived three patients who were officially dead for between 40 and 60 minutes.

One of those patients was 39-year-old Colin Fielder, who suffered a heart attack last year. While being whisked away in the ambulance, he was asked which of the two nearby hospitals he preferred. "For some reason, I said the Alfred, which is pretty lucky because they are the only one that has it," Fielder said.

"It" is the AutoPulse, a portable CPR machine that performs constant chest compressions that essentially keep the heart beating. What makes the AutoPulse unique is that instead of pistons pressing and lifting only one part of the sternum, the AutoPulse uses a band that wraps around and squeezes the entire chest. (See a video of the machine in action below.) As a result, "victims receive more consistent, high-quality compressions… which means improved blood flow," according to the manufacturer's website.


In addition to the AutoPulse, the Alfred doctors also used a technique on Fielder called extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) — it's essentially an artificial lung outside the body that keeps oxygen and blood flowing to the patient's brain and vital organs. ECMOs have been used in the past for lung transplant recipients as well as extremely ill newborns. But it is this combination of ECMOs and the AutoPulse, currently in clinical trials at the Alfred, that has proved successful in reviving the dead.

The combination of the ECMO and AutoPulse helps to keep the body "living" while also giving doctors time to diagnose the heart attack's source and treat it. More time and care mean an increased chance of survival and ensure further research can be conducted on cardiac arrests — still the most common cause of death worldwide.

The Alfred has so far used these treatments on seven patients, three of whom survived without further complications despite being clinically dead for substantial amounts of time. If the trials can build on these early successes, other Australian hospitals may see the expanded role of the ECMO and the AutoPulse in their own facilities, officials say.

Now before you up and move to Australia, similar techniques have been used in the U.S in equally limited trials. Dr. Sam Parnia, head of intensive care at Stony Brook University Hospital in New York, has dedicated his career to bringing ill people back from the dead. His research has taught him that successful resuscitation comes by way of mechanical CPR combined with ECMO treatment. Parnia says these methods are not only straightforward and relatively cheap, but also could save up to an estimated 40,000 American lives per year. To help spread the word to doctors and patients alike, Parnia wrote a book earlier this year called The Lazarus Effect.

In the book, Parnia describes how Japan has already standardized the practice of using ECMO in emergency rooms. Siphoning the dead person's blood out of the body, into and through an external oxygenator, and back through the body has reportedly extended the time a person can be dead and brought back to life again by hours. Parnia tells The Guardian of one such miraculous instance:

"The longest I know of is a Japanese girl I mention in the book," Parnia says. "She had been dead for more than three hours. And she was resuscitated for six hours. Afterwards, she returned to life perfectly fine and has, I have been told, recently had a baby."

http://theweek.com/article/index/244147/how-an-australian-hospital-is-bringing-clinically-dead-people-back-to-life

midnight rambler
19th May 2013, 09:24 AM
On another related note, there was a case here locally where a bad guy abducted this young woman, strangled her with his hands, and then left her for dead in her car parked in a Walmart parking lot. Witnesses had seen this woman get out of the car and walk around it at least once, hours after her car was parked there. She was subsequently found dead in her car. It turns out that there is this circumstance that when someone is strangled bones are broken in their neck and they may not immediately die, rather they will die hours later. Weird.

VX1
19th May 2013, 09:31 AM
...doctors are unable to explain, however, resuscitated patient's sudden cravings to eat brains...

I wrote a script for a movie once, but then "Sixth Sense" came out and was too much like it, but, the premise was that a guy died, but was brought back to life artificially with a new experimental method. Coming home from the hospital, he notices a grey figure holding a sign in the crowd that says "come home". Further in the story, the grey figures get more and more aggressive in trying to make him have a fatal accident. In the end, he learns of the experiment and realizes he's effectively dead and that he cannot stay in this realm any longer. This news story sure makes me think of that.

Ponce
19th May 2013, 09:53 AM
Well, as I have posted before, I was clinically dead three times so that now I have only six left.....no wonder I like cats.

In another note, this guy wife was dead and he worked on her on his own after the Dr's had given up, after an hour the Dr's were about to call security to take him away when his wife came back to life.

V

Serpo
19th May 2013, 02:10 PM
My father in law goes to this hospital sometimes.

Its good to know they can bring you back from the dead........;D