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Redsfaithful
06-15-2005, 03:07 PM
Turns out the woman was blind, so there's no way she was following the balloon in the video or looking at her loved ones. She also showed no signs of abuse, and had a brain half the normal weight with damage that was massive and irreversible.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/06/15/schiavo.autopsy.ap/index.html


LARGO, Florida (AP) -- An autopsy on Terri Schiavo backed her husband's contention that she was in a persistent vegetative state, finding that she had massive and irreversible brain damage and was blind, the medical examiner's office said Wednesday. It also found no evidence that she was strangled or otherwise abused.

But what caused her collapse 15 years earlier remained a mystery. The autopsy and post-mortem investigation found no proof that she had an eating disorder, as was suspected at the time, Pinellas-Pasco Medical Examiner Jon Thogmartin said.

Autopsy results on the 41-year-old brain-damaged woman were made public Wednesday, more than two months after her death March 31 ended a right-to-die battle between her husband and parents that engulfed the courts, Congress and the White House and divided the country.

She died from dehydration, Thogmartin said. He said she did not appear to have suffered a heart attack and there was no evidence that she was given harmful drugs or other substances prior to her death.

He said that after her feeding tube was removed, she would not have been able to eat or drink if she had been given food by mouth, as her parents' requested.

"Removal of her feeding tube would have resulted in her death whether she was fed or hydrated by mouth or not," Thogmartin told reporters.

He also said she was blind, because the "vision centers of her brain were dead," and that her brain was about half of its expected size when she died 13 days following the feeding tube's removal.

Michael Schiavo said his wife never would have wanted to be kept alive in what court-appointed doctors concluded was a persistent vegetative state with no hope of recovery. The Schindlers, however, doubted she had any such end-of-life wishes and disputed that she was in a vegetative state.

The medical examiner's conclusions countered a videotape released by the Schindlers of Terri Schiavo in her hospice bed. The video showed Schiavo appearing to turn toward her mother's voice and smile, moaning and laughing. Her head moved up and down and she seemed to follow the progress of a brightly colored Mickey Mouse balloon.

They believed her condition could improve with therapy.

However, doctors said her reactions were automatic responses and not evidence of thought or consciousness, and Thogmartin's report went farther.

"The brain weighed 615 grams, roughly half of the expected weight of a human brain," he said. "This damage was irreversible, and no amount of therapy or treatment would have regenerated the massive loss of neurons."

Thogmartin said the autopsy report was based on 274 external and internal body images, and an exhaustive review of Terri Schiavo's medical records, police reports and social services agency records.

He said hospital records of her 1990 collapse showed she had a diminished potassium level in her blood. But he said that did not prove she had an eating disorder, because the emergency treatment she received at the time could have affected the potassium level.

Testimony in a 1992 civil trial indicated that she probably was suffering from an eating disorder that led to a severe chemical imbalance.

Over the years, the Schindlers had sought independent investigation of their daughter's condition and what caused it. Abuse complaints to state social workers were ruled unfounded and the Pinellas state attorney's office did not turn up evidence of abuse.

Calls seeking comments Wednesday from the Schindlers and Michael Schiavo's attorney, George Felos, were not immediately returned.

Speaking before the report was issued, Felos, said the Schindlers continue to engage in a "smear campaign against Michael to deflect the real issues in the case, which were Terri's wishes and her medical condition."

During the seven-year legal battle, federal and state courts repeatedly rejected extraordinary attempts at intervention by Florida lawmakers, Gov. Jeb Bush, Congress and President Bush on behalf of her parents.

Supporters of the Schindlers harshly criticized the courts. Many religious groups, including the Roman Catholic Church, said the removal of sustenance violated fundamental religious tenets.

About 40 judges in six courts were involved in the case at one point or another. Six times, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to intervene. As Schiavo's life ebbed away following the final removal of her feeding tube, Congress rushed through a bill to allow the federal courts to take up the case, and President Bush signed it March 21, but federal courts refused to step in.

GIK
06-15-2005, 03:50 PM
Inconceivable!

Rojo
06-15-2005, 03:54 PM
The U.S. Senate should've done the autopsy since they're such experts at everything.

traderumor
06-15-2005, 04:01 PM
Turns out the woman was blind, so there's no way she was following the balloon in the video or looking at her loved ones. She also showed no signs of abuse, and had a brain half the normal weight with damage that was massive and irreversible.

But then, that isn't the dispute folks like myself raise with the handling of such cases. I don't think blindness totally explains away looking in the direction of something, esp. if the person was talking to her. Regardless, its still wrong to kill the terminally ill and mentally disabled in any and all situations, even if they ask you too, IMO.

Redsfaithful
06-15-2005, 04:33 PM
I don't think blindness totally explains away looking in the direction of something, esp. if the person was talking to her.

The balloon? Or was a person telling her to look at the balloon? I honestly don't remember.


Regardless, its still wrong to kill the terminally ill and mentally disabled in any and all situations, even if they ask you too, IMO.

Heh. No one has ever said anything about killing the mentally disabled. That strawman is so tired.

Rojo
06-15-2005, 07:36 PM
No one has ever said anything about killing the mentally disabled. That strawman is so tired.

I am for euthanizing strawmen.

KYRedsFan
06-15-2005, 07:53 PM
Let's not allow medical science to get in the way of any political grand standing. Hopefully this will allow people to just be a little more rational about situations like these.

Rojo
06-15-2005, 09:24 PM
Terry was mentally disabled.

And the Grand Canyon is a hole in the ground.


"Mentally disabled" usually means what we used to call "retarded" and that's what most people think of when you use those words, which is why, I suspect, you use them.

Matt700wlw
06-15-2005, 10:04 PM
The fact that the politicians got involved in what obviously wasn't their business is still disgusting.

They need to keep their greedy little paws out of this stuff.