A 68 year old enters the hospital with severe stomach pain. Found to have a large bleeding ulcer, she goes to surgery, the ulcer is removed but for some still unknown reason parts of the stomach have died off. Once inside we discovered the stomach had given way, releasing contents into the body cavity. Infection and
sepsisGroup b streptococcal septicemia of the newborn developed.
Through day four of treatment the patient was responsive to
externalExternal incontinence devices stimuli, e.g. pain, touch. In order to
maintain blood presure, the patient was given large amounts of fluid. Because the patient's blood vessels were not ratining fluid, the patient began to swell up with fluid just below the skin. From day four through day six no sign of response was noted. Then upon ending the sedative regiment, the patient failed to regain consciousness.
Her
EKGAtrioventricular block, ekg tracing
Ecg
Exercise stress test was fine but
EEG shows irratic/chaotic waves. The patient's clinical response is consistent with severe brain
stemStem cell research damage. We are unable to conduct MRI testing due to patient's current condition. One theory holds that the body has been sending off micro-bursts of material to the brain, thereby causing many mini strokes. However, this damage appears to be massive; as such, I ask:
Could the fluid intake have caused the stem damage from the same swelling that affected the body? As of now, the damaged stem doesn't appear to be related to BP crash/O2 issues. However, without an MRI we have no empirical imaging to even confirm the stem damage.
Any information on similar case studies will be appreciated. Could a lack of Activated Protein C be a factor?, etc. Might a BAERs test prove helpful?
Is the patient now alive/brain damaged ? unconscious/brain dead ?