15 comments

  • theturtlemoves 35 minutes ago
    I'd be curious to read about 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 year follow-up.

    Party pooper warning.

    I'm afraid I don't have rose tinted glasses, due to personal experience with a family member with TBI (accident at age 16, 3 weeks in a coma). The aftereffects are profoundly destabilizing to his environment. I sometimes have quite a dark view of people's need to be a rescuer and celebrate the "alive!", when they don't have to deal with the next 40-60 years of living...

    • spacedoutman 16 minutes ago
      I have a similar view on general anesthesia now, everyone i know(including myself) that has had operations have been permanently affected by anesthesia.

      Turning yourself off breaks far more than doctors realize i fear.

      • noduerme 10 minutes ago
        I'm not sure what you mean. I've been under general anesthesia a few times and not had any negative consequences. My dad has had multiple brain surgeries, and he's fully functional. Most people I know have been under at least once.

        I think before you blame anaesthesia it's worth wondering what else happened to you on the table, or whether something else might be causing you the problems. A lot of other things happen during a surgery that can screw you up pretty badly. I'm pretty sure I was dropped off a table once.

      • faeyanpiraat 4 minutes ago
        Could you elaborate on specific effects?
      • infofarmer 11 minutes ago
        Exacerbated by astonishing overuse for anything from a 2-minute endoscopy to a 15-minute hand surgery. The pursuit of “comfort” at the cost of fractional lobotomy.
        • normie3000 6 minutes ago
          One of the joys of private healthcare: I've seen general anaesthesia used to allow the patient to claim on their inpatient cover instead of their (exhausted) outpatient cover.
        • noduerme 9 minutes ago
          You're suggesting people undergo endoscopy without anesthesia? You go first, bud.
  • isoprophlex 1 hour ago
    "Survival" here being, of course, not a black-and-white thing:

        > Outcome and Follow-Up
        > On day 59, the boy was discharged to inpatient neurorehabilitation. At 6-month follow-up, he was giving short commands, standing without support, riding a tricycle, eating soft foods, and relearning simple tasks. Peripheral neuromuscular weakness continued to improve.
  • qnleigh 1 hour ago
    That is incredible. 2.5 hours underwater, 1.5 hours of CPR. They were instructed not to start rewarming him until he could be given more comprehensive treatment at a hospital. They list 'death' as a differential diagnosis...

    He didn't come out unscathed though. They describe his progress:

    > At 6-month follow-up, he was giving short commands, standing without support, riding a tricycle, eating soft foods, and relearning simple tasks. Peripheral neuromuscular weakness continued to improve.

    which is quite limited for an 8-year old, but remarkable considering the circumstances.

  • addaon 1 hour ago
    They’re not dead until they’re warm and dead.
  • usernametaken29 1 hour ago
    I remember that cryogenesis was deemed viable in the 80ies but essentially surface area is your enemy. Anything larger than a cat can’t be resurrected. It’s pretty bizarre really, they froze mice and microwaved them back to life.
    • kombookcha 1 hour ago
      Weird! I wonder if there is some exponential complexity going on. More neural pathways leaving more stuff that can potentially break from an uneven freeze/thaw? Or is it literally that the freezing and thawing can't happen evenly when you're too big? A brief transistional period with unfrozen outsides and frozen solid insides is probably not great for you.
      • HerbManic 55 minutes ago
        I would assume it is purely because of the mass.
  • knights_gambit 4 minutes ago
    Do you give slow CPR in these cases?
  • js2 1 hour ago
    I was rewatching The Abyss for the first time since 1989 and wondered just what is the process for reviving an asystole heart[^1].

    [^1]: It was only relatively recently that I learned you can't shock an asystole heart. e.g. https://medicalsciences.stackexchange.com/questions/5874/can...

    • ethersteeds 1 hour ago
      CPR and a boatload of epinephrine, it seems.

      That passage bears quoting at length, it's where I really teared up:

      > At initiation of ECMO, the boy's rhythm was asystole. The boy was rewarmed with an ECMO heat exchanger-patient gradient ≤10 °C. [...] As the patient's temperature approached 22 °C (72 °F), low-frequency and low-amplitude sinusoidal electrical deflections were noted on his electrocardiogram. As the patient continued to rewarm, these phasic electrical deflections slowly increased in frequency and amplitude. At approximately 28 °C (82 °F), sinusoidal deflections organized into more classic cardiac electrical activity reminiscent of sinus bradycardia with a wide complex. Amiodarone, calcium gluconate, magnesium sulfate, bolus epinephrine, and epinephrine and norepinephrine infusions were administered. After further rewarming, sinus bradycardia developed and ultimately progressed to normal sinus rhythm...

  • mchusma 1 hour ago
    Incredible. I wonder if they can make progress on survivability of regular drowning.
    • bsder 1 hour ago
      Unlikely. The issue is cold and the speed of the cold. Children have a higher surface-to-mass ratio along with less subcutaneous fat which allows them to cool quickly. The article quotes the breakpoint:

        If water temperature is >6 °C (43 °F), survival is unlikely for submersion >30 minutes.
      
      And even still, it isn't like the child came out unscathed.
  • tehnub 57 minutes ago
    Reminds me of the extended description of what it might be like to drown in an ice lake in the book Stella Maris — it wouldn't be quick.
  • the_arun 56 minutes ago
    Well written article. Life is a miracle. We are trying to understand it & there is more to learn everyday. I remember a couple of years ago, a 50yr patient (someone I know) was saved from a severe heart attack using induced hypothermia and recovering them slowly.
  • looofooo0 38 minutes ago
    I am sceptical about the 147 minutes, the child could have still clinging onto the ice and just drowned a minute before the parents reached the pond.
    • ddeck 34 minutes ago
      The timeline lists "Sled tracks seen to broken bond ice, EMS called" at 16:44. He was pulled from the water at 18:57. The article text further clarifies:

      Parents discovered sled tracks from home onto broken pond ice through which he fell.

      He left the house at 16:00, which is why they give the range of 147 to 177 minutes.

    • wahern 31 minutes ago
      It seems below about ~80F you lose consciousness. This kid was nearly half that. Moreover, there have been other similar cases: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32482520/
  • bedatadriven 36 minutes ago
    There was some medical terminology that I didn't understand. The NotebookLLM podcast version is disturbingly good: https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/21c5eddb-ada4-4726-85...
  • hannasm 1 hour ago
    Wim hof has a similar childhood story (maybe not quite as extreme)...
    • HerbManic 41 minutes ago
      Wim hof has a lot of stories, hard to tell which ones are true or not unfortunately.
  • OhNoNotAgain_99 0 minutes ago
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