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Breakthrough Coma Reversal with Glue
Ivanhoe Broadcast News
"He gave me the last rites, and he blessed me, and I kissed his hand, and he left, and I felt pretty good about it," Bliudzius recalls. But doctors at Cedars-Sinai weren't ready to give up on Bliudzius when he arrived in a coma, drifting in and out of consciousness. For two days, he'd complained of headaches. An MRI confirmed his doctor's suspicion -- a spontaneous spinal fluid leak. "We do what's called a blood patch. We take some of their own blood and inject it into the space surrounding the spinal column," says Franklin Moser, M.D., a neuroradiologist at "It creates a great deal of scarring," Dr. Moser says. With guidance from a CT scanner, doctors injected the glue through large needles, sealing off the leak in Bliudzius' upper back. The next day, he was conscious and after a few days, his headache was gone. "It does sound strange, but miracles happen," Bliudzius says. Spontaneous spinal fluid leaks are more common than doctors once thought. A headache is the major symptom. Doctors at Cedars-Sinai are now using the glue more often in patients with SFL. They've seen between a 30- and 50-percent success rate. Spinal fluid leaks can occur spontaneously or as a result of a spinal tap. FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT: Nilou Salimpour Public Relations salimpourn@cshs.org (310) 246-9889
Last updated 10/3/2007.
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