Schiavo Autopsy Shows Massive Brain Damage

  • Thread starter Thread starter Evo
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Brain Damage
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the autopsy results of Terri Schiavo, which revealed severe brain damage and raised questions about her condition and the implications for the right-to-die debate. Participants explore the ethical, medical, and political dimensions of the case, reflecting on personal rights regarding life support and the influence of external parties in such decisions.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that the autopsy confirms the husband's claim that Schiavo was in a permanent vegetative state, while others express skepticism about the implications of the findings.
  • There are concerns about the media's role in sensationalizing the case, with some arguing that more pressing global issues deserve attention.
  • Participants discuss the ethical implications of keeping individuals on life support against their wishes, with some advocating for clearer laws regarding the definition of a vegetative state.
  • Questions arise about the ability of medical professionals to determine Schiavo's condition while she was alive, with suggestions that brain scans could have provided clarity earlier.
  • Some participants express frustration over the ongoing debate despite the autopsy results, indicating a divide between those accepting the findings and those who remain in denial.
  • There are personal reflections on the desire for autonomy in medical decisions, with some participants sharing their fears about being kept alive artificially.
  • Humor and sarcasm are used by some participants to express their views on the situation and the involvement of government and religious influences in personal medical decisions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus; multiple competing views remain regarding the implications of the autopsy findings, the role of external influences in the case, and the ethical considerations surrounding life support.

Contextual Notes

Limitations in the discussion include unresolved questions about the determination of pain perception in Schiavo, the adequacy of medical assessments during her life, and the influence of political and religious factors on the case.

Evo
Staff Emeritus
Messages
24,114
Reaction score
3,277
The parents insisted an autopsy be performed on their daughter and the results show that the husband was right all along.

Even with the results showing she was blind and in a permanent vegetative state with no chance to improve, her parents remain in denial of the truth.

"An autopsy on Terri Schiavo, the severely brain damaged woman whose death sparked an intense debate over a person's right-to-die, showed that her brain was severely "atrophied," weighed less than half of what it should have, and that no treatment could have reversed the damage."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/15/national/15cnd-schiavo.html
 
Biology news on Phys.org
Not to be cynical but who cares anymore? The media had no right in the first place to milk this story. There are plenty of people starving in this world that need more attention.
 
It has to do with the "right to die" as you wish. The parents wanted media attention to try to block their son in law from taking their daughter off life support.
 
He's saying there are bigger problems going on. I agree.
 
whozum said:
He's saying there are bigger problems going on. I agree.
Of course there are bigger problems. This is still a problem, and one that worries me. I don't want to be stuck on life support against my wishes and I don't want my children to bear that burden.

The parents and their attorney say they aren't dropping this and the President says he hasn't changed his mind on the case.
 
I hope he shows a degree of tact, and doesn't put the autopsy photos into public hands.
 
How was the husband right?

and could they determine if she felt any pain?
 
Just from a practical standpoint, couldn't the doctors have done a some type of brain scan to determine the weight of the brain while she was living? If the doctors could of been able to say that her brain was the size of peanut wouldn't that have saved a lot of time and money?
 
Last edited:
yomamma said:
How was the husband right?

and could they determine if she felt any pain?
He said that she was in a persistent vegetative state, most of her brain was gone, so she would not have felt pain.
 
  • #10
dduardo said:
Just from a practical standpoint, couldn't the doctors have done a some type of brain scan to determine the weight of the brain while she was living? If the doctors could of been able to say that her brain was the size of peanut wouldn't that saved a lot of time and money?
They did, and experts testified that her brain had shriveled up. That's the problem, the religious/political faction refused to accept what was undeniable in the brain scans.

I want the right to not be kept alive by artificial means. This case cost the public a fortune in medical care.
 
  • #11
If the parents wanted to keep her alive, they should have. You can not revive someone, and this serious brain damage shows that Terry Schiavo probably would not care if she was or was not kept alive.

She did not seem blind to me. The clips on the news kept showing her looking at things people would dangle over her head.

I agree with dduardo's first statement though.

Edit: How is food "artifical means", Evo? Is feeding a baby artifically keeping it alive?
 
  • #12
Evo said:
I want the right to not be kept alive by artificial means. This case cost the public a fortune in medical care.

I really don't see why this is even controversial. Keeping someone alive against their will? What the hell is the argument for this?

edit: critical mistake
 
Last edited:
  • #13
"This case cost the public a fortune in medical care."

I'm sure the hospital wasn't complaining.

"She did not seem blind to me."

Again, simply shining a light in her eyes would have been sufficient to determine if she was blind or not.

I agree with Evo that there was too much religious/polital influence. Maybe we need a law specifically defining what a vegetative state is and not allow life support after a certain threshold
 
  • #14
theCandyman said:
Edit: How is food "artifical means", Evo? Is feeding a baby artifically keeping it alive?
The autopsy revealed that she would not have been able to eat if she was fed, as the parent's claimed. She was "fed" through a tube, that's artificial.
 
  • #15
theCandyman said:
She did not seem blind to me. The clips on the news kept showing her looking at things people would dangle over her head.
The autopsy showed conclusively that the portion of the brain responsible for sight was atrophied so badly that there was no way she could see.

"Seemed to me..." is a replacement for countless number of doctors telling them that it's not true and that things will not improve?
 
  • #16
This just reinforces my original opinion that her brain-death was hereditary. As for Bush... :rolleyes:
 
  • #17
Evo said:
Of course there are bigger problems. This is still a problem, and one that worries me. I don't want to be stuck on life support against my wishes and I don't want my children to bear that burden.

The parents and their attorney say they aren't dropping this and the President says he hasn't changed his mind on the case.
Evo said:
He said that she was in a persistent vegetative state, most of her brain was gone, so she would not have felt pain.
Evo said:
They did, and experts testified that her brain had shriveled up. That's the problem, the religious/political faction refused to accept what was undeniable in the brain scans.

I want the right to not be kept alive by artificial means. This case cost the public a fortune in medical care.
The point is -- now that the autopsy has proven beyond doubt that Terri was in a persistent vegetative state, why does this remain controversial even in this thread? The question remains that people still aren't accepting the facts, and are still arguing against proven findings. Until the religious/political factions who support government intervention stop this nonsense, I agree with Evo it is something to be worried about. :bugeye:
 
  • #18
G'dangit*%!frickin'*@#! frackin' -- Let's just round up these people who are in deep denial, clinging to their delusional beliefs, and put them on feeding tubes - yeh! :eek:
 
Last edited:
  • #19
It's interesting to note that in this case the government didn't try to do something about it. But they feel the need to stick their noses into everything else.

I'm thinking of getting a tattoo on my upper left chest: D.N.R. But I bet that won't stop some wannabe hero putting their hands on me to try and save my life... I swear; if I die (or am anywhere near death) and someone brings me back - they're next!
 
  • #20
Arctic Fox said:
It's interesting to note that in this case the government didn't try to do something about it. But they feel the need to stick their noses into everything else.

I'm thinking of getting a tattoo on my upper left chest: D.N.R. But I bet that won't stop some wannabe hero putting their hands on me to try and save my life... I swear; if I die (or am anywhere near death) and someone brings me back - they're next!
Here's something you can complete and keep with your important papers as well:

The Living Will

I, _________________________ (fill in blank), being of sound mind and body, do not wish to be kept alive indefinitely by artificial means. Under no circumstances should my fate be put in the hands of peckerwood ethically challenged politicians who couldn't pass ninth-grade biology if their lives depended on it.

If a reasonable amount of time passes and I fail to sit up and ask for a __________________ ( cold beer, Margarita, Bloody Mary, Martini, Rum & Coke, shot of Wild Turkey, or whatever) it should be presumed that I won't ever get better. When such a determination is reached, I hereby instruct my spouse, children and attending physicians to pull the plug, reel in the tubes, and call it a day.

Under no circumstances shall the hypocritical members of the Legislature (State or Federal) enact a special law to keep me on life-support machinery. It is my wish that these boneheads mind their own damn business, and pay attention instead to the health, education and future of the millions of Americans who aren't in a permanent coma. Under no circumstances shall any politicians butt into this case. I don't care how many fundamentalist votes they're trying to scrounge for their run for the presidency, it is my wish that they play politics with someone else's life and leave me alone to die in peace.

I couldn't care less if a hundred religious zealots send e-mails to legislators in which they pretend to care about me. I don't know them, and I certainly haven't authorized them to preach and crusade on my behalf. They should mind their own damn business.

If any of my family goes against my wishes and turns my case into a political cause, I hereby promise to come back from the grave and make his or her existence a living hell.

_____________________

Signature

DATE__________
 
  • #21
ROTFLMFAO! OMFG, that's funny!
 
  • #22
SOS2008 said:
Here's something you can complete and keep with your important papers as well:

The Living Will

I, _________________________ (fill in blank), being of sound mind and body, do not wish to be kept alive indefinitely by artificial means. Under no circumstances should my fate be put in the hands of peckerwood ethically challenged politicians who couldn't pass ninth-grade biology if their lives depended on it.

If a reasonable amount of time passes and I fail to sit up and ask for a __________________ ( cold beer, Margarita, Bloody Mary, Martini, Rum & Coke, shot of Wild Turkey, or whatever) it should be presumed that I won't ever get better. When such a determination is reached, I hereby instruct my spouse, children and attending physicians to pull the plug, reel in the tubes, and call it a day.

Under no circumstances shall the hypocritical members of the Legislature (State or Federal) enact a special law to keep me on life-support machinery. It is my wish that these boneheads mind their own damn business, and pay attention instead to the health, education and future of the millions of Americans who aren't in a permanent coma. Under no circumstances shall any politicians butt into this case. I don't care how many fundamentalist votes they're trying to scrounge for their run for the presidency, it is my wish that they play politics with someone else's life and leave me alone to die in peace.

I couldn't care less if a hundred religious zealots send e-mails to legislators in which they pretend to care about me. I don't know them, and I certainly haven't authorized them to preach and crusade on my behalf. They should mind their own damn business.

If any of my family goes against my wishes and turns my case into a political cause, I hereby promise to come back from the grave and make his or her existence a living hell.

_____________________

Signature

DATE__________
OMG :smile: That hilarious! I'm signing it!
 
  • #23
That was great, I'd use it.
 
  • #24
whozum said:
I really don't see why this is even controversial. Keeping someone alive against their will? What the hell is the argument for this?
Hope. You have seen The Matrix, Reloaded, right (yes, more Matrix philosophy from Russ...)?

During the circus, my opinion of the parents bounced back and forth between pity and contempt, but now there is only pity. Most of the facts in the autopsy report have been known for years, so I didn't expect that to change their opinions. But what has changed is their daughter is now dead - but they still are considering futher legal action (against who, for what purpose, I don't know). If it wasn't evident before, it should be evident now that the parents need psychological help. I don't know what other family/friends they have, but clearly they don't have an emotional anchor - they need someone to force them to deal with reality because they are incapable of doing it for themselves. They won't ever get over this loss if they don't.
 
  • #25
russ_watters said:
Hope. You have seen The Matrix, Reloaded, right (yes, more Matrix philosophy from Russ...)?

During the circus, my opinion of the parents bounced back and forth between pity and contempt, but now there is only pity. Most of the facts in the autopsy report have been known for years, so I didn't expect that to change their opinions. But what has changed is their daughter is now dead - but they still are considering futher legal action (against who, for what purpose, I don't know). If it wasn't evident before, it should be evident now that the parents need psychological help. I don't know what other family/friends they have, but clearly they don't have an emotional anchor - they need someone to force them to deal with reality because they are incapable of doing it for themselves. They won't ever get over this loss if they don't.

Maybe you misunderstood my question, hope? hope for what.. she claimed she didnt want to live? If it was in her will to do this, would there be any problem?
 
  • #26
SOS2008 said:
politicians who couldn't pass ninth-grade biology if their lives depended on it.
whoo! I'm smarter than most politicians! which is obvious...
 
  • #27
russ_watters said:
If it wasn't evident before, it should be evident now that the parents need psychological help. I don't know what other family/friends they have, but clearly they don't have an emotional anchor - they need someone to force them to deal with reality because they are incapable of doing it for themselves. They won't ever get over this loss if they don't.
I don't think anyone can convince them to get that help. They are so far lost in their delusions and inability to get past that "blame" stage of grief that I don't think anyone could get through to them to tell them otherwise. Really, they are delusional at this point. It doesn't matter what the evidence shows, they will continue to believe what they believe and will just insist the evidence is wrong when it disagrees with their beliefs. They may never come around from this, and even if they do, I doubt it will happen quickly.
 
  • #28
Evo said:
"An autopsy on Terri Schiavo, the severely brain damaged woman whose death sparked an intense debate over a person's right-to-die, showed that her brain was severely "atrophied," weighed less than half of what it should have, and that no treatment could have reversed the damage."

I don't have much knowledge in this area. Couldn't the brain damage be scanned or measured by a CAT or MRI scan?
 
  • #29
whozum said:
Maybe you misunderstood my question, hope? hope for what.. she claimed she didnt want to live? If it was in her will to do this, would there be any problem?
Actually, there's a slight misunderstanding there that I should have addressed: Terri did not express a clear wish on the issue. However, the parents did say that that was irrelevant - they would have fought to keep her alive against her wishes had they been clear. (and actually, they were right in a way: it was irrelevant what they thought because it wasn't up to them, it was up to the husband to interpret her wishes.)

Either way, the point is the parents were hopeful that Terri would recover and that hope (c'mon - remember what "the architect" said in "Reloaded" about hope) was so strong it overcame logic and reason. Their hope is what continues to drive them to ignore reality. Its actually pretty apropos:
The Architect said:
Already I can see the chain reaction, the chemical precursors that signal the onset of emotion, designed specifically to overwhelm logic, and reason. An emotion that is already blinding you from the simple, and obvious truth: she is going to die, and there is nothing that you can do to stop it...

Hope, it is the quintessential human delusion...
(yes, I did just watch this movie tonight)
Moonbear said:
I don't think anyone can convince them to get that help.
Probably not, but do they have anyone who is trying? Sometimes it takes a serious - physical - kick in the ass or slap in the face to get someone to listen when they have lost it. That can only come from a very close friend or relative. Too often in situations like that people think they need to be "supportive" and they go along with it just to make them feel better about their delusions. Its Crossing Over syndrome (that talk-to-the-dead show staring John Whatshisnuts). In the short term the hope makes them feel a little less bad, but they will never get over it.
 
Last edited:
  • #30
Evo said:
I want the right to not be kept alive by artificial means. This case cost the public a fortune in medical care.

Simple, living will.

If trheres absolutely anything to be learned from this media hoopla, its that you need a living will. Most people didnt know she didnt have a living will and it turned into a case of 2 sides sayen the woman said 2 different things. With a living will, unless God himself comes down and smites everyone down, no argument can be made as to what a persons wishes are for situations like that.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 211 ·
8
Replies
211
Views
24K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
5K
Replies
15
Views
5K
  • · Replies 30 ·
2
Replies
30
Views
14K
  • · Replies 238 ·
8
Replies
238
Views
30K
  • · Replies 13 ·
Replies
13
Views
5K
  • · Replies 65 ·
3
Replies
65
Views
13K