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View Full Version : Man thught for 23 years to be in a coma was actually conscious



Eldritch
11-24-2009, 12:20 PM
Rom Houben has been trapped in a series of worst nightmares, including trying for 23 years to alert those around him that he was not in a coma. A new report suggests he's not alone in his experience.

In 1983, Belgian engineering student and martial arts enthusiast Houben, then 20, was in a car accident that was thought to have left him in a vegetative state. Doctors relied on the widely-used Glasgow Coma Scale, assessing his eyes, verbal, and motor responses. What they failed to notice was that Houben was actually conscious--but completely paralyzed.

"I screamed, but there was no one to hear," he says in an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel. Three years ago, neurologist Steven Laureys used modern scanning techniques to discover that Houben's cerebral cortex was, in fact, functioning. (The doctor has only just now made Houben's story public.)

Houben, who communicates via a computer with a special keyboard activated with the slightest movement of his right hand, is now 46. He has spent more than half his life trapped in his own body, and says he only survived this excruciating existence by dreaming himself away. In the interview, this is what he typed:


I am called Rom. I am not dead. The nurses came, they patted me, they sometimes took my hand, and I heard them say "no hope." I meditated, I dreamed my life away--it was all I could do. I don't want to blame anyone--it wouldn't do any good. But I owe my life to my family. Everyone else gave up.


I studied what happened around me as if it were a tiny piece of world drama, the bizarre peculiarities of the other patients in the common room, the entry of the doctors into my room, the gossip of the nurses who were not embarrassed to speak about their boyfriends in front of "the extinct one." That made me an expert on relationships.

Full story Here (http://news.cnet.com/8301-27083_3-10403861-247.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5).

anonymaus
11-24-2009, 03:49 PM
I can't imagine the hell that must have been. The very suggestion of it is hellish enough.

Gooding
11-24-2009, 03:56 PM
That's the word for it..absolute Hell.:(

Electronic God-Man
11-24-2009, 04:14 PM
Horrible.

I was instantly reminded of this song by Metallica about a similar situation that happened to a soldier. This guy could move a little I think though.

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Eldritch
11-24-2009, 04:32 PM
What's unbelievable about this case is that all it took for doctors to realise their mistake was a simple PET scan -- an easy and quick routine procedure.

Eldwin
11-24-2009, 04:50 PM
Thats many peoples worst nightmare. Poor guy.

SwordoftheVistula
11-25-2009, 08:25 AM
What's unbelievable about this case is that all it took for doctors to realise their mistake was a simple PET scan -- an easy and quick routine procedure.

Quite believable-Belgium has a socialist health care system