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Nov. 23 2009 - 10:29 pm | 25 views | 1 recommendation | 3 comments

Coma Nightmare

Lubbock Heart Hospital, Dec 16-17, 2005

Image by brykmantra via Flickr

A man trapped in his mind for 23 years:

For 23 years Rom Houben was ­imprisoned in his own body. He saw his doctors and nurses as they visited him during their daily rounds; he listened to the conversations of his carers; he heard his mother deliver the news to him that his father had died. But he could do nothing. He was unable to communicate with his doctors or family. He could not move his head or weep, he could only listen.

Doctors presumed he was in a vegetative state following a near-fatal car crash in 1983. They believed he could feel nothing and hear nothing. For 23 years.

Then a neurologist, Steven Laureys, who decided to take a radical look at the state of diagnosed coma patients, released him from his torture. Using a state-of-the-art scanning system, Laureys found to his amazement that his brain was functioning almost normally.

“I had dreamed myself away,” said Houben, now 46, whose real “state” was discovered three years ago, according to a report in the German magazine Der Spiegel this week.

Laureys, a neurologist at the ­University of Liege in Belgium, published a study in BMC Neurology earlier this year saying Houben could be one of many cases of falsely diagnosed comas around the world. He discovered that although Houben was completely paralysed, he was also completely conscious — it was just that he was unable to communicate the fact.

Houben now communicates with one finger and a special touchscreen on his wheelchair – he has developed some movement with the help of intense physiotherapy over the last three years.


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  1. collapse expand

    I wonder how many people who read this went immediately in their head to either the movie “Johnny Got His Gun” or the Metallica video “One”? I also have to wonder how much psychological damage he suffered while he was unable to communicate? Its crazy how adaptable the mind can be when forced.

  2. collapse expand

    I’m withholding judgment until I can find more information in the medical press. After seeing this photo of the patient, I’m a bit suspicious that this might be another case of facilitated communication combined with wishful thinking.

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