Doctors give Comatose Sharon feeding tube (AP) Updated: 2006-02-02 09:48 JERUSALEM - Doctors inserted
a feeding tube in Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's stomach on Wednesday,
according to Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital, where he is being treated for a
massive stroke.
Sharon, 77, has been in a coma since he suffered a stroke on Jan. 4 and the
stomach procedure was further evidence that he is likely to be incapacitated for
a long time.
Under a projected
image of Ariel Sharon, acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, second left,
smiles before giving a speech during the opening rally for election
campaign of the Kadima Party in Jerusalem Tuesday Jan. 31, 2006. The
Kadima Party, founded by Ariel Sharon, formally kicked off its election
campaign on Tuesday, maintaining a wide lead in polls for the March 28
elections, though Sharon has been in a coma for more than three weeks
after suffering a massive stroke. [AP] |
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Long-term care specialists and a U.S. authority on comatose patients have
examined Sharon in recent days. Experts say his chances of regaining
consciousness or a meaningful level of activity are slim.
"Tonight Prime Minister Ariel Sharon underwent a gastrostomy, a process in
which a tube is inserted into the stomach for feeding," the statement said. "The
procedure was carried out under anesthetic and was successful. The prime
minister's condition continues to be critical and stable."
According to an extensive study on strokes and stoke care by Dr. Jose Biller
Dr. Ernesto Fernandez-Beer, quoted in "Best Practice of Medicine, 2004,"
gastrostomy is indicated for patients "in whom a prolonged phase of recovery is
anticipated."
"This basically tells me that they've made a commitment to preserving him as
long they can in this very debilitated state," said Dr. Keith A. Siller, medical
director of New York University's Comprehensive Stroke Care Center. "The patient
has in fact surived but without the likelihood of any significant functional
recovery ... The prognosis is terrible."
Sharon suffered what was described as a "massive stroke" with "significant"
bleeding in his brain on Jan. 4, a day before he was to check into Hadassah
Hospital for a procedure to correct a tiny defect in his heart that was said to
have contributed to a mild stroke he suffered two weeks earlier.
Doctors have come under fire from critics who questioned whether Sharon
should have been treated with massive doses of anticoagulants after his first
stroke, which was caused by a small blood clot in a cranial artery. Doctors
admitted that the anticoagulants made it more difficult for them to stop the
bleeding from the later hemorrhagic stroke.
The extensive bleeding and the lengthy operations Sharon underwent to stop it
have led experts to conclude that he must have suffered severe brain damage and
was unlikely to regain consciousness. If he does awaken, most say, the chances
of his regaining meaningful cognition or activity are slim.
Sharon had set up a new political party, Kadima, just weeks before his
strokes, and was planning to lead it in a drive for re-election in March 28
general elections. Polls showed that he was a strong favorite to win.
His close political ally, Ehud Olmert, was named acting prime minister after
Sharon's second stroke and is Kadima's candidate for prime minister. Polls have
shown the party maintaining its wide lead under Olmert.
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