I obtained my
initial medical records. I knew something was amiss. My initial Glasgow
coma score (an initial score of consciousness) was very low. It was 3.
The lowest you can get while still alive is a 3.
Recently
I re-read the initial hospital transfer record. I knew it said resuscitated, but I wanted to see
how the word was used. "Resuscitation" is bringing someone back to life.
CPR is cardiopulmonary resuscitation. If someone has a heart attack, you want to get their heart beating again so you do CPR. You are essentially bringing that person back to life. I wanted the whole context of the word used.
I
was stunned when I read the sentence, "The patient's blood pressure and
hypothermia was resuscitated." Blood pressure is restarting the heart,
but I couldn't believe "hypothermia" was also done. Hypothermia is when
your body temperature is below normal. My body was cold.
So I was cold and had no heartbeat. Isn't that a cadaver? I had to look that up. A cadaver is a dead human body ready for dissection.
"Hypothermia was resuscitated," would mean a cold, dead body is brought back to normal body temperature. Not only was my heart restarted, but my body was warmed back up.
Restarting a heart and warming up a corpse has been done in fiction. Now it's in real life.
Why
it was decided to revive me as opposed to sending me to the morgue I do
not know. For everyone who says "You are lucky to be alive," I can
answer, "I'm supposed to be dead. YOU are lucky I am alive."
Updated 11/2/2016
Updated 11/2/2016
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