Man Misdiagnosed as Being in a
"Persistent Vegetative State"
for 23 Years
Part Two of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Earlier this morning I read
about Rom Houben, misdiagnosed
as being in a so-called
"persistent vegetative state"
for 23 years. Doctors discovered
three years ago Houben, who was
severely injured in a car crash
in 1983, had been mentally alert
all along, but unable to
communicate. Only today did the
news reach a wider audience.
But I was unable to post a TN&V
until later because of a number
of other things I had to get
done. This is fortunate, because
as the day progressed many very
important details and
clarifications came out.
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Rom Houben |
A lot of distinctions had been
blurred in the accounts. For
example, four very different
conditions--coma, comatose,
vegetative state, and persistent
vegetative state--were used
almost interchangeably. Even
after reading a number of
stories, it's difficult to know
who thought what when. One of
the later stories suggested
doctors first thought Houben was
in a coma and then lapsed into a
"persistent vegetative state."
But whatever the diagnosis, it
was wrong. Fortunately for
Houben, a former martial arts
enthusiast and engineering
student, he was not starved to
death.
"Mr Houben recalled the
terrifying realisation after he
came round from his accident
when he knew that he had lost
complete control of his body –
but no one knew that he was
fully conscious," The Times of
London reported. Although he
could hear every word his
doctors were saying, Houben
could not communicate with them.
"I screamed, but there was
nothing to hear," he told the
German magazine Der Spiegel.
Initially, all the credit for
the correct diagnosis seemed to
belong to the medical team
headed by Dr. Steven Laureys, a
neurological researcher at the
Liege University Hospital in
Belgium, a man who clearly is on
a mission. While they deserve
plenty of kudos, there is a
"rest of the story," as we shall
see momentarily.
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Dr. Steven Laureys |
"Laureys, who is head of the
coma science group and neurology
department at Liège University
hospital, concluded coma
patients are diagnosed falsely
'on a disturbingly regular
basis," The Guardian reported.
"In around 40% of cases
diagnosed as vegetative, more
careful examination shows there
is still some level of
consciousness. He examined 44
patients believed to be in a
vegetative state, and found that
18 of them responded to
communication. 'Once someone is
labelled as being without
consciousness, it is very hard
to get rid of that,' he told
Spiegel magazine, calling for a
systematic overhaul of the
methods of diagnosis."
He told the Guardian that
"patients who are not fully
unconscious can often be treated
and are capable of making
considerable progress." Houben
now communicates through a
computer, and a special device
above his bed makes it possible
for him to read books
But how did Dr. Laurey even
learn about Houben? His parents,
who did not believe he was
comatose or vegetative,
according to the Associated
Press. His mother, Fina Houben,
talked with the AP by phone and
said they had taken Rom to the
United States five times for
tests.
"More searching finally got her
in touch with Laureys, who put
Houben through a PET scan that
indicated he was conscious,"
reports Raf Casert of the AP.
"The family and doctors then
began trying to establish
communication. A breakthrough
came when he was able to
indicate yes or no by slightly
moving his foot to push a
computer device placed there by
Laureys' team. Then came the
spelling of words using his
finger and a touch-screen
attached to his wheelchair." It
is not entirely clear why the
case came to light at this
particular moment; Laureys
published his study in the
journal BMC earlier this year,
showing that some 40% of
patients diagnosed as being in a
vegetative state were not.
Be that as it may, Houben is a
very happy man. "I'll never
forget the day that they
discovered me, it was my second
birth," he said. Now he says,
"'I want to read, talk with my
friends via the computer and
enjoy my life now that people
know I am not dead," according
to the Daily Mail.
Part Three
Part One |