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Doctors Said He Was Almost Brain Dead, So His Family Said Their Goodbyes. Then He Recovered
Lifenews.com ^ | 01/08/19 | Dave Andrusko

Posted on 01/14/2019 2:20:58 PM PST by kathsua

Where have we heard this story before?

On December 12, T. Scott Marr is found in his bed, unresponsive but breathing, and rushed to Methodist Hospital where he is placed on a breathing machine. He is diagnosed as having suffered a stroke.

The family returns the next day and doctors tell them there has been no neurological improvement. “Brain swelling — primarily in the back of the brain — concerned his doctors,” according to Kelsey Stewart of the Omaha World-Herald.

“We were worried in this case that this was not a reversible process and that it was going to proceed to brain death,” Dr. Rebecca Runge told Stewart. Preston Marr, his daughter, and the rest of family said they “faced a harsh reality: Scott Marr was not expected to recover.”

And, as if on cue, we learn that Scott Marr had always told the family, “’I never want you guys to see me lying in a hospital bed, lying in a nursing home,” Preston Marr told the World-Herald.

“They [the doctors] told us he was on his way to brain death, so we said our goodbyes before extubating him, all the monitors were shut off and we waited by his side,” Preston Marr informed Stewart.

Preston and her three sibling held their father’s hands, “said their goodbyes and cried,” Stewart wrote. “The next morning, the Marr family wasn’t quite ready to make funeral arrangements.”

Meanwhile Marr did not die. He rallied. Coincidence that the children went to the hospital instead of meeting with a funeral home? Stewart wrote

On their way, Preston took a call from her aunt, who said Marr seemed to be responding.

It was probably just a reflex, thought Preston, who’s a nurse.

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“Hi, Dad,” she said as she walked into the room. Eyes still closed, her dad cracked a smile.

“I literally thought I was dreaming,” Preston said. “It was the craziest moment ever.”

“I asked him to move his thumbs, and he slowly moved his thumbs, and I asked him to wiggle his toes, and he wiggled all his toes really slightly,” Preston Marr said.

The explanation came following a subsequent test. It turned out that Scott Marr “was suffering from a rare condition called posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome,” Stewart explained.

“It’s commonly caused by high blood pressure, but there are many things that can cause it,” Dr. Runge said. They initially diagnosed a devastating stroke because such severe swelling is not typical of the posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, she said.

Scott Marr has his own explanation.

“I’m not an extremely religious person. I don’t go to church every Sunday,” the former announcer for the Creighton University Men’s basketball team told Stewart. “But I do believe in God. I believe with all my heart. And now this is just proof for me that everything I’ve ever heard is true. That he loves me. That he’s right there for me. … It was pretty much a miracle.”

LifeNews.com Note: Dave Andrusko is the editor of National Right to Life News and an author and editor of several books on abortion topics. This post originally appeared in at National Right to Life News Today —- an online column on pro-life issues. Banner


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: braindamage; medical; neardeath; prolife
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To: kathsua

Exactly what happened with my mom last year. They sent her to hospice though and withheld sustenance. My dad and I slipped her ice chips and sweet tea and she recovered.


21 posted on 01/14/2019 3:07:05 PM PST by refreshed (But we preach Christ crucified... 1 Corinthians 1:23)
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To: the_Watchman

In the last 16 months my son has spent 249 days in the hospital. Probably another hundred trips for chemo, radiation, therapy, clinic visits etc. Six times in the ICU from a few days to a few weeks. Three times they came out and said he is the most critical patient in the hospital and most likely wouldn’t make it.

His last trip to the hospital started right after Labor Day. He went in for a combo chemo but infections and various problems arose. He left us mentally for several months. He would respond with a simple answer but there was nothing there. Didn’t want to eat. Finally about mid December he started coming around. He came home right before Christmas and is now eating and able to walk on his own and get around just fine. His voice has returned and can carry a conversation just fine.

Thursday we will go to find out if he is strong enough for a stem cell transplant.

The doctors have been surprised many times. I believe one of the main factors for his survival thus far is that he just wants to live. When they asked him in August if he wanted to continue with various treatments he said he just wanted to live so do what has to be done.


22 posted on 01/14/2019 3:14:11 PM PST by shelterguy
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To: kathsua

LOL - had a fella in our church went into a coma at about 50, after a year his wife wanted to pull the plug, kids said no, big family fight - he woke up a week later.


23 posted on 01/14/2019 3:25:47 PM PST by Jolla
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To: kathsua

The expression “saved by the bell” has nothing to do with escaping defeat in a round of boxing. People used to be so afraid of being buried alive, they rigged up a device that detected breathing motion in a buried ‘corpse,’ and it rang a bell located above ground on the tombstone. I don’t know if anyone was ever actually ‘saved by the bell.’


24 posted on 01/14/2019 3:38:40 PM PST by sparklite2 (Don't mind me. I'm just a contrarian.)
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To: the_Watchman

“Anyone who doesn’t believe that God intervened just doesn’t understand!”

after the ‘good doctoring’, of course...


25 posted on 01/14/2019 3:40:24 PM PST by IrishBrigade
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To: IrishBrigade
"after the ‘good doctoring’, of course..."

My primary told us that the doctors at the first hospital were quite wrong, but using 'good doctoring' in the sense that they were operating within current established protocols; i.e., they had done nothing wrong.

The point is that God provided a path to get me connected to "better doctors" who were operating outside of established protocols. Those were the guys who saved my life.

26 posted on 01/14/2019 3:46:01 PM PST by the_Watchman
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To: kathsua

He got better.


27 posted on 01/14/2019 3:49:28 PM PST by ALASKA (Watching a coup by a thousand cuts....)
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To: the_Watchman

What was the first diagnosis and what was the actual condition, if you don’t mind?


28 posted on 01/14/2019 4:30:20 PM PST by PistolPaknMama
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To: PistolPaknMama
What was the first diagnosis and what was the actual condition, if you don’t mind?

Original diagnosis was a simple brain bleed. The first doctors were hoping that the blood would reabsorb. The correct diagnosis was a CSF, Cranial Spinal Fluid, leak. The leak induced the brain bleed as the cranial fluid departed. My brain was actually not floating any more. It was resting on the bone at the bottom of my skull.

However, brain scans, by protocol, are taken with the patient lying down, so the image does not show the lack of floatation. Also, they aren't looking for any leaks.

The surgeries were (1) to put in drains so the blood would drain and (2) blood patches to seal the leaks. They fixed mine with two patches. The person seen by my primary the prior year had required five patches.

29 posted on 01/14/2019 5:27:25 PM PST by the_Watchman
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To: the_Watchman

“A similar brain problem happened to me last year.”

God gave you a great PCP!

I was kid and during a gymnatic class hit my head badly. About a half hour later had a headache and lost a small portion of central vision, later had vomit going across the nurse’s office. Oh coarse, back then, the school nurse sent me home!

On the way home I would have these short shaking spells. Got home and just passed out.

Years later in a nueroanatomy class class I learned I had posterior brain trauma with enough swelling that my brain was pushing out of the hole in the bottom of my skull and to cut off the blood supply to the back of my brain to affect my sight. (That is lecture I will never forget)

It sounds like a very mild posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome.

Did a Pediartic Neurology rotation at St. Joes. Saw God’s miracles every day!


30 posted on 01/14/2019 6:26:00 PM PST by lizma2
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To: refreshed

During the time surrounding Terry Shiavo, a women was speaking out about witholding fluids.

She had been in a coma, fluids witheld and she woke up.

She talked about how painfull dehydration is. It’s hell.
You and your pop did the right thing, MAJOR!


31 posted on 01/14/2019 6:39:09 PM PST by lizma2
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To: the_Watchman

Gotta love all the missed diagnoses that miraculously end up being decided by other human doctors that nothing wrong was done.


32 posted on 01/15/2019 2:29:58 AM PST by Delta 21
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