Diy Methods For Inducing A Coma At Home?

Induced coma is a temporary state of deep unresponsiveness caused by sedative administration to protect the brain. It can be caused by various factors, such as traumatic head injury, stroke, brain tumor, or drug or alcohol misuse. To survive an induced coma, round-the-clock medical monitoring and care are necessary. A vacation to a tropical paradise is recommended for cost-effective and less deadly options. Long sleeps can sometimes help feel refreshed and better after a long sleep.

Medically induced coma follows similar principles to natural comas, but it can also protect the brain by using rubber bands, stationery, and noise-cancelling devices. The brain activity consumes oxygen, and in some cases, a medically induced coma may help prevent brain damage, improving survival chances and reducing the likelihood of long-term disability.

When a loved one is admitted to Intensive Care and is in an induced coma and on a ventilator/breathing machine for their critical illness, families often don’t recognize their loved one. Bathing usually involves sponge baths, feeding can be continuous or periodic, and toilet care can involve catheterization and catheterization.

An induced coma can have an antidepressant effect, as Heather B Armstrong experienced during a study that found it had a dramatic difference. High concentrations of oxygen are given to the patient, and anesthetic drugs are administered through a drip to make them fall.

In summary, induced coma is a reversible state of deep unconsciousness brought about by sedative administration to protect the brain. Causes can include traumatic head injury, stroke, brain tumor, or drug or alcohol misuse.


📹 What Happens To Your Body in a Coma?

Falling into a Coma sounds like a terrifying experience, but is it all that bad? In today’s educational animated cartoon we dive into …


What is the easiest way to induce a coma?

A Medically Induced Coma is a condition where a patient is induced unconscious by a combination of sedatives, high-strength GABAergic medications, and/or barbiturates. The sedative is continuously administered to maintain the patient’s unconsciousness, minimizing brain injury. The patient is monitored every couple of hours to ensure they are still unconscious and sufficiently medicated. EEG equipment is often used to monitor the patient’s brain state of arousal, and some medications may be automatically administered as needed.

The patient requires respiratory assistance and may also be prescribed with other medications to stop seizures, lower blood pressure, and maintain heartbeat. Once sedatives are withdrawn, the brain activity gradually returns to normal, and the patient slowly wakes up from the artificial coma.

How do you put someone in a chemically induced coma?

The patient is administered high concentrations of oxygen for respiratory support, and anaesthetic agents are administered intravenously to induce anaesthesia, followed by the insertion of a specialized tube into the oral cavity and lungs.

How do you naturally go into a coma?

A coma is a state of consciousness similar to deep sleep, where the brain is not stimulated to awaken. Causes include infections, head injuries, stroke, brain abscesses, brain tumors, cerebral oedema, or epileptic seizures. A coma is a medical emergency and can be caused by various factors such as head injury, stroke, cardiac arrest, hypoglycaemia, hypothermia, drug overdose, and kidney or liver failure. A person in a persistent vegetative state has damage to brain areas responsible for consciousness, self-awareness, and personality.

What could lead to coma?

A coma is a state of consciousness similar to deep sleep where the brain is not stimulated by external stimuli. It is a medical emergency caused by various factors such as head injury, stroke, cardiac arrest, hypoglycaemia, hypothermia, drug overdose, and kidney or liver failure. A person in a persistent vegetative state has damage to brain areas responsible for consciousness, self-awareness, and personality.

What drug puts you in a coma?

An induced coma is a temporary state of unconsciousness caused by a controlled dose of an anesthetic drug, often a barbiturate. It is used to protect the brain during major neurosurgery, as a last line of treatment in certain cases of status epilepticus, and in refractory intracranial hypertension following traumatic brain injury. However, induced comas usually result in significant systemic adverse effects, such as complete loss of respiratory drive, reduced gut motility, hypotension, hypokalemia, and increased risk of bed sores and catheter infection. These adverse effects can complicate efforts to maintain cerebral perfusion pressure and often require the use of vasopressor drugs.

How long can you be unconscious without brain damage?
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How long can you be unconscious without brain damage?

Concussions often occur without loss of consciousness (LOC), and periods of brief unconsciousness may be associated with concussion. Unconsciousness lasting longer than 30 minutes is considered a more serious form of brain injury. Experimental animal work by Ommaya and Gennarelli demonstrated that 3 out of 6 grades of traumatic brain injury severity could be determined with milder forms of brain injury not involving LOC. Grades IV through VI involve LOC associated with worse neurologic outcomes.

Within each grade, shearing strains on brain tissue produce lesions near the cortical surface in milder cases, while deeper lesions within the brain are associated with more severe biomechanical forces.

What to bring someone in a coma?

A common challenge faced by hospital patients is the lack of access to quality tissues and toilet paper. To address this issue, it is recommended that items such as nourishing food, quality time, books, magazines, comfortable attire, gift cards, extension cords, and reminders of home be considered as potential solutions to improve the patient’s well-being.

What chemical induces a coma?

Pharmaceutically induced coma agents like barbiturates, propofol, and midazolam are commonly used to reduce cerebral metabolism and blood flow. These agents are responsible for the reduction in these factors. The use of cookies on this site is governed by copyright © 2024 Elsevier B. V., its licensors, and contributors. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.

Can stress lead to coma?

Psychogenic coma is a condition where a person experiences a sudden loss of consciousness after undergoing anesthesia. This case report presents a case of an elderly woman who was unresponsive after recovery from anesthesia with remimazolam and remifentanil. The patient’s physical examination, laboratory testing, and radiographic imaging did not reveal any obvious organic causes, suggesting that prolonged unconsciousness is related to psychiatric origin. The patient spontaneously regained consciousness after 48 hours without any neurological complications. The mechanisms and causes of psychogenic coma are poorly understood.

What drug can cause coma?
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What drug can cause coma?

Opiates can cause coma, respiratory depression, and pinpoint pupils, which can occur in hospital settings or recreational drug use. Systemic manifestations include hypothermia, hypoventilation, bradycardia, hypotension, and cool, clammy skin. Needle marks should be sought in suspected intravenous drug use, and even first-time users can present in severe states. Respiratory decompensation occurs either because of CNS suppression or secondary to pulmonary edema.

Pupils are typically small but reactive and dilate widely in response to a narcotic antagonist. Methadone-induced hypoglycemia has been reported in patients with cancer receiving long-acting methadone for pain.

Benzodiazepines can cause decrease in cerebral blood flow and metabolism, which correlates with the density of benzodiazepine binding sites. Endozepines, the ligands for benzodiazepine recognition sites on GABAA receptors in the CNS, are elevated. The major site of action of benzodiazepines is the reticular activating system, but in high doses, generalized cortical depression may occur, contributing to stupor.

Benzodiazepines potentiate the effects of other CNS depressants, and with concomitant ethanol ingestion, respiratory depression becomes more dramatic, and patients may become comatose and require ventilatory support.

How to stimulate someone in a coma?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

How to stimulate someone in a coma?

It is recommended that objects be placed in the person’s hands with pleasant tactile sensations and textures, such as soft toys, silk scarves, or books. It is important to note that even in the absence of a verbal response, the individual may still comprehend the communicated message, whether it is spoken directly to them or over the bedside.


📹 This mom got the call her son woke up from a coma after 16 days ❤️

This mom got a call that her little boy woke up after being in a coma for 16 days and this was the moment they seen each other for …


DIY Methods For Inducing A Coma At Home
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

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  • I stood by my dad’s bed while he was in a coma. My mom would get excited because his eyes seemed to flinch when she spoke to him. It was about 5 minutes of this happening that I realized his body was just going through involuntary movements. She looked at me for approval that he was responding to her questions. I saw her smiling for once in a long time and realized that, she also knew he was involuntarily moving but her hope was much greater than mine was. RIP dad.

  • I was in acoma and I could hear everything around me but I couldn’t move it was scary because I desperately tryed to open my eyes but they would not open. I just saw darkness. I would be in and out of it I could hear one minute next I was sleeping and one day the doctors told my mom that they may have to pull the plug and I was scared I wanted more than ever to get up and say I was okay but I couldn’t one day before the doctor was about to pull the plug my mom asked to have five minutes with me so he allowed her and she held my hand I could feel a tear go down my face and she said I know.. and at the time my mom had cancer and was a single parent I have a little brother and he came in to the room and said” please don’t leave.” I realized that I didn’t want to die so I tried really hard and at first it didn’t work but I started thinking about my mom and brother and I finally opened my eyes and squeezed my mom’s hand and my mom was shocked and right away doctors started rushing in I couldn’t talk but I smiled. I don’t remember the rest but I had to have therepy for 5 years to learn how to walk and talk again but I’m grateful for being alive. And basically that is my story.

  • I was in a coma in September 2018, and I woke up after a week. I was drowning due to a scuba diving accident. My brain didn’t receive sufficient blood supply which caused the brain shut down; Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE). Recalling my experience during the coma, I could smell, sense, and hear the sounds around me, people talking and even felt the presence of the people in the room but everything was ambiguous

  • A friend of mine was in a medically induced coma for about 2+ months And she says that the whole time she thought she was an employee at McDonald’s, and all her family and friends worked there with her. She could recall some actual conversations that we had “had” together (just us talking around her or to her, but things we could all verify were definitely discussed in front of her) And in her memory she was totally included and present, however we were all McDonald in uniform and working and everything was very abstracted like a dream. Very interesting case. She was studied intensely by Melbourne university

  • I was in a coma for three weeks and it felt like I only slept for over night. I do remember having weird and vivid dreams that I can’t explain. I would even hear voices talking to me while I’m in a coma but I’m not aware that I’m in a coma if that makes any sense. But when I did wake up finally, it felt so shocked and weird, it’s unexplainable.

  • I was in a coma. After I woke up, I had to go through physical therapy, and had some pretty bad bed soars. I didn’t dream or anything. I remember waking up and being so out of it, not knowing where I was or what had happened, and I was also so tired. I made quite the incredible recovery considering my doctors thought I’d never wake up.

  • I woke my dad up from a coma. I was in 2nd grade, I didn’t know better so I was gonna wake him up for no reason. I went downstairs to shake him. Didn’t wake up. Shook him harder, didn’t wake up. That usually works, so I thought he was dead. I pulled him off the couch. Never woke up. I had no hope. I started to cry. I cant live without my dad. He was my best friend. I started pulling him even more, he finally woke up! I was so relived. I remembered him saying “Since you saved me, I will give you an reward.” After school, I went to the carnival. Ever since that day, I had hope for everything!

  • My grandmother was actually in a car crash at the age of 10, she was thrown about 20-30 feet out of the car (she was asleep and at that year they weren’t required to wear seatbelts). I’d always ask her to describe what it was like being in a coma for about 3 weeks, she always explained that she could hear people, but couldn’t move. She said one day she thought she yelled ‘Shut Up’ as the people were too loud, but she never confirmed it.

  • I was in a coma from December 3rd to December 26th, 2011. It’s a long story on how I got there but during it I had to have a ventilator, I was suffering from sepsis and ended up with pneumonia, and had an underlying infection behind it all as well. My muscles completely atrophied and it was a painful recovery process. I didn’t return to a normal standard of living until 2014, and even then there’s still some things that’ll never be the same. Love your guys articles! Grateful to see something like this so people can learn the realities of what comas can be.

  • I wonder how many people here have actually been in a coma. There is so much more information missing. Recovery time takes so much longer than you think. If you know someone in a coma, speak gently and always be positive. For me it was a month in a coma and another month to learn how to walk and talk again.

  • I was in a medicinally induced coma and I remember everything. I heard a huge amount also. So unless you’ve experienced it, I’d suggest not commenting because you don’t know. Even doctors don’t know. You also feel everything and have hallucinations due to hallucinogenic drugs given. You can hear if someone is nice or mean to you. Some of those people aren’t nice at all and that’s unfortunate. However, I remember everything. I had horrible nightmare about people trying to harm me and members of my family regularly. I was in a medically induced coma for about 3 weeks. It’s a blessing Yah blessed me to make it out alive.

  • I was placed into a medically induced coma twice in a month and a half between December 2022 and January 2023 due to a mental health crisis. I was in the comas for a combined two weeks. In the December incident, i went into cardiac arrest twice and had to relearn how to swallow, eat and walk. I was on full body life support and even though i haven’t been officially diagnosed, i have been having nightmarish flashbacks ever since and probably have some kind of undiagnosed PTSD. In January, i had a similar mental health incident and went into respiratory arrest and was on life support again, constantly needing my lungs and airway cleared, with my oxygen saturation levels occasionally under 70%. Since then, my seizure frequency (im Epileptic) has increased and im typically unable to speak after my seizures now. Im not the same as i was but im so much better mentally now. IF YOUR IN CRISIS, DONT GIVE UP! It’s not worth it.

  • 3:20 – “Brain death” is in fact defined inconsistently, which posits both moral and legal issues and confuses the public. Diagnosis of brain death is often required to be rigorous and often includes the loss of ALL brain function, including autonomic function. These individuals have zero brain activity, from the “high” to the “low” part of the brain. There is no attempt to breathe independently, no corneal reflex, no pupillary response, etc. But it depends on if you’re assuming “brain death” equals cerebral death or total brain death.

  • My friends’ dad was in a really bad car accident in April 2017 that landed him in a coma for a few weeks. He was pronounced brain dead & they were going to take him off of life support. But he actually woke up. Despite that he is going to spend the rest of his life in a rehab facility, he is actually recovering. I completely broke down when I had heard of his condition because I was 15 & my friends (twins) were 13. He had been like my dad when we were neighbors

  • My great grandma had bedsores in the hospital. When we moved her to a nursing home, the nurses actually cared and watched for that plus treated her existing ones. Nurses can be so lazy and incompetent. But the ones who care are the difference between life and death. Elderly nurses, go check on your patients right now… just do it.

  • I was in a coma, but only for two days. I was asked basic questions when I woke up, they checked my arms and leg strength. I did have a hard time balancing myself during physical therapy when they had me stand up. I can’t imagine how difficult it would be for somebody that was in a coma months, or years then wake up.

  • My mom always told me this and her mom told her the same thing. If there is ever a time where I need machines to keep me alive, if after 2 days nothing gets better let me go, cause I don’t want to have to live plugged up to a machine. My grandma was in a coma showing no signs of brain activity and after 2 days my mom told my grandpa what her mom told her, a few hours later my grandma was dead because they turned the machines off

  • My older brother is currently in a coma. He was hit by a car doing 40 mph while crossing 6 lanes of traffic in the early evening hours of February 18th. He’s currently hospitalized in Daytona Beach, FL. where the accident happened and has been in the ICU ever since. He’s made quite a bit of progress in the 4 weeks and 2 days since his accident. At first he wasn’t breathing on his own and had fractured his skull in 2-3 places, fractured his pelvis and 3 vertibrae along with one of his arms being broken and then his wrist on the other arm. Doctors weren’t really giving us much hope that things would improve and eventually had to have the dreaded talk with my poor 72 yr old mother about some VERY DIFFICULT if not IMPOSSIBLE decisions she could be faced with having to make. Of course it practically killed me to see my mom in such a state of helplessness and grief and yet all I COULD DO was pray to my Heavenly Father and BEG Him to HEAL my brother and bring him back to us if it were His will. Well….just 15 mins ago I received a text message from my other brother who’s in FL. with my mom and who’s been at our brother’s bedside for 3 weeks now saying that my brother has opened his eyes and that it looked like he was following. I haven’t heard anything else from him yet…..but it’s only been 15-20 mins so they might have doctors in the room assessing the situation at the moment. I’m SO EXCITED I could literally jump up and down the whole entire day!!!!! Praise be to God!!!! By His stripes we are healed.

  • I’ve been in a 5 day-medically induced coma…when I woke up I thought I was breaking out of the matrix, ripping out my IVs and catheter…not fun…they should put a big sign in front of coma patients that says hospital because I was freaked out when waking up and years later have problems from ripping those tubes out.

  • I was in a medically induced coma in August 2017 (due to illness) for 3 weeks. The worst part of recovery was learning all my fine motor skills again. Learning how to hold a fork, or brush your teeth, comb your hair, write your name…the list is endless! Not to mention learning how to walk again. But walk this article does not talk about in detail is how it effects your conciseness. I have the most vivid memories of things going on in

  • My brother in law was in a car accident last year and in a coma for about 6 months.. he’s now learning to rewalk, and he lost his memory from about 5 years ago till now. He said he remembers the doctor saying he wasn’t going to live the first week of his coma, and all of us talking to him. Amazingly, he is going to make a full recovery, but with memory loss. He can talk and is still very similar to his old self😊

  • I always wonder if my dad could hear me before he passed when he was in a coma. His heart stopped & they did CPR for 15 minutes. He was on breathing machines in the cardiac ICU. After a week there was still nothing. They did an EEG & he had no brain activity. We knew he didn’t want to be on breathing machines & there was paperwork he had filled out to say that… So we had to let him go…It wasn’t even five minutes after the machines stopped that he passed away… I was 19. That was the hardest decision I had to partake in. I still feel like I regret it even though it’s what he wanted.

  • @ 3:31 this article tells you about a coma that’s pretty simullar like an epileptic attack that i had especially the part that the brain make’s a reboot because when i was awake again it was like a puzzle that fell into place and never watch on a old 50/60 hertz tv it’s bad ( sorry for my broken english I did my best 😉 )

  • My mom was in a coma for a month. I sat by her bed every day and prayed. I told mom how much I loved her. I told her that I knew she was a fighter and now it’s time to show the doctors they’re wrong. Mom woke up!!! She told me she could hear me arguing with the doctors and telling them ‘I’m not going anywhere’ even when visiting hours are over. This isn’t the first time I’ve heard of such things…I have heard several stories about women in comas who wake up when they believe their child is threatened or in peril in some way. My mom has always been highly protective so the docs threatening to throw me out after visiting hours was overheard – and must have ticked her off on some subconscious level while in the coma!!!

  • So basically, vegetative state: The computer turns on but you can only enter BIOS, everything else including the CPU and the motherboard is fried. Brain dead: Everything is dead including the PSU, you can replace it but it will only result in a black screen and only the fans working. Locked in syndrome: the GPU is busted or the screen is dead but everything else works fine Catatonia: Actually has nothing to do with coma – Windows can load but the screen is frozen all or most of the time, and if you manage to gain control for short periods of time, the GUI is extremely slow, all or most file are corrupted, you may be able to open a window or click on a file, but it won’t open and the screen will freeze in that state until the next time you manage try to gain control and change things (referring to the changing of positions of a catatonic patient by another person and the patient freezing in the position that person have put them in). “Regular” coma (the kind where you spend your time unconscious but you can wake up from): The computer is working, the hard drive that windows is on is OK but Windows refuses to load up. Also, after you finally manage to load windows you may find out that parts of the hard drive may be damaged, some files were deleted which might or might not be partially or fully recovered, some programs including windows may be corrupted and work funny, one of the RAM modules might be dead, the GPU or GPU drivers might be damaged and the CPU might be overheating, and you don’t know whether you’ll be able to fix all of those things or not and if so to which extent (bad analogy because with a computer you can always replace parts)

  • “Comas… render a person unable to respond to external stimuli” is absolutely false for some people. I have been in two comas in the last four years. The first lasted just over 90 days, the second was seven days. Although my reactions to external stimuli may not have been ‘normal’, I most definitely did react. I was, also, neither oblivious nor unresponsive, especially to painful stimulus.

  • I’ve actually been in 3 comas not sure if its luck or not but it is strange being in one for sure!!!!!! My first I slipped into for a monthish during or so after a brain resection and craniotomy second and third followed seizures which the dr’s put me into. Was told that I was a miricle after the last one was on a vent for 4 months. Was insane trying to learn how to eat and drink, walk and talk after them all!

  • I was in a two month coma in 1999. Due to severe ulcerative colitis I had to have an Ileostomy done. Got really infected and slipped into a coma. Was reopened twice more. Woke up two months later. Due to not moving, I developed a severe blood clot in my left leg. Went from about 160 lbs down to 127. Had to learn how to walk and breathe again. Wasn’t fun. Docs didn’t expect me to survive-I just woke up. My first question I wrote down (I was intubated) was, “Did they find JFK jr yet?). Had to take a year off university.

  • I was in a coma i thought i was about to die cause whenever i tried to talk to my mother it sounded like i was yelling after i went to get my braces and then when i got back up off the ground everything was white and when she tried to give me water i couldn’t see where i was going I’m glad I wasn’t moving or i would have ran into the street

  • I was in a coma for two weeks. It was the most strangest experience ever. It was like I was still awake it was that lucid I remember I working on a squash planation and after I went back to their house to sleep the next day I was back helping them with their squash planation and then they said to me you can keep a squash if you want. So I put one in my backpack (it crushed 12 cider cans I had in there, which is strange cause I rarely drink. I got home to there house, threw my backpack on my bed, got in to bed then went to sleep next thing I knew the backpack came crashing through the roof of my bedroom landing on my back breaking my back, it brought down the house.. and I was working on the squash plantation the next morning… And when I woke up I was telling the doctors. That was the last thing I remember and I believed I had a broken back. Then when they told me I wasn’t I was like okay I am going home then. they told me I had a fall and broken my skull and I had to learn to walk again. The accident happened 1 and a half months ago (the day before new years eve) and I am still in hospital. I had other crazy dreams some NSFW. The doctors told me I nearly died 4 times during my coma. Or if I did wake up I would be severely disabled.. luckily I have already recovered quite a bit. Like I remember everything apart from the accident. And I have full use of my body. I am just temporarally (they say) blind in one eye and I have a half of my skull missing with skin covering my brain on one side; it feels weird to poke your brain, it feels numb.

  • I already fell in a coma after a severe hit to the head after falling in stairs, enough to give me some inability to do some sounds correctly when speaking or precision in my movement. The coma lasted 3 hours and somehow, gaming is what gave me back my precision in my movements to something even better than average.

  • We have my mom 4 months she was in a non responsive comma on the second month the head dr in the hospital said to stop feeding and let her die she would never wake up she woke up on month 3 and just tonight we went to dinner with her and friends she is still in rehab but is almost back to her old self what a crazy roller coaster go from planning her funeral to planning dinner I never thought I would eat dinner with my mom ever again when this nightmare began

  • My father was in what was considered a vegetative state, he’d had a very rare complication after what was supposed to have been minor surgery. He went into cardiac arrest due to blood loss and by the time they got his heart started again he was ‘brain dead’ we took him off life support after three days and they could confirm he was indeed brain dead, some of his organs we already failing. He’d always told us if something like that happened to him, to just let him go, he didn’t considered being medically kept alive a life worth living.

  • I’m perusal this because my brother was hit by a car four days ago and is in a coma. He is reacting when they suction out his ventilation tube by grimacing and slowly raising his right arm and moving his left toes. He has other very serious injuries but the head injury is the biggest worry for us and the doctors.

  • My mother went into cardiac arrest, they were able to revive her. she has an unknown medical condition which eventually caused liver failure after she was revived she went into a coma the chances of her not being brain dead were incredibly slim. After around three months she woke up and got a liver transplant after the whole ordeal she said that she had dreams while she was in her coma about passed loved ones and me. 😯🤗

  • March of 1997 I was in a coma for 15 days I believe. I suffered 3 years amnesia and had to relearn how to take care of myself. The time I spent in physical therapy and occupational therapy is mind blowing. I remember being 15 years old, just getting my independence, to learning how to walk again. What makes it hard is remembering walking and not being able to make your body do it.

  • I was in a 3 1/2 week coma after a car accident. But it was a dream, but at the same time i could hear, feel, smell, taste. and was awar of the passage of time, while 100% unable to respond in any way. I heard my Aunt Stella and Uncle Roger, my mom, best friends. But it is a nitemare come to life, you a unable to wake from, and dont wish it on my worst enemy.

  • I was in a medically induced coma this exact time last year October 2th- November 7th I had my left lung removed November 1st and let me tell you I remember way more than I should my metabolism was crazy and just ate through the meds my mom tells me stories how I would look around the room for doctors or family and if I didn’t see anyone I would try to wiggle my face down to my hands ( that had mitt type things on them) and try to rip my breathing tubes out

  • Happend to me few times. I wouldn’t say coma but I blacked out after heavy drinking. I fell on the ground & was woken up by strangers on the floor. Happend to me at least 6 times. Also, it’s hard to remember what i was doing after the black out. I hate it when that happened to me because I was abusing my drinking. Luckily, the passers by helped me up. Could easily have been robbed, or something.

  • My uncle got an highblood attack and hit his head on a wood and his suffering on blood clut (idk the spelling) and we talked for 2 hours and he peed and vomitted 7 times after that he slept and he was on a coma the doctor said theres a little chance he’ll survive and the doctor forces us to have an brain surgery on my uncle my uncle almost died on a carjack but the doctor revived him on the time of the surgery the doctor said the surgery was succesful i was happy but after a week my uncle died (9/13/19) i was very sad and my family needed to pay the doctor 500,000$ and before paying the doctor we will sue the doctor for doing a surgery even he knows the patient will die. Thats my story. And actually i still diddnt move on its been 2 months. My uncle was too young and gonna turn 44 this coming nov 24 2019

  • I wonder if it’s possible to take somebody out of a coma by inventing a new way to connect the brain stem to the rest of the brain, and get the parts of the brain communicating with eachother again. If it operates on electrical signals, all we have to do is find a way to connect the different parts of the brain, wire them together in a sense, and then attavh said wires onto the brain stem and develop a device like a pacemaker, except it keeps the pace of your brains electric signals, and keep the brain going with a pacemaker. I wonder if it’s possible

  • ER nurse here, in the hospital we call it “intubated” or “chronic trach/vent,” no one really uses the word “coma.” I can’t remember if there ever has been a patient in a “coma” that was not on a ventilator via endotracheal tube or tracheostomy. Fyi: an “endotracheal tube” is not that little tube that goes in your nose.

  • I believe in miracles so if anyone in my immediate family was in a coma, I’d be the type to tell doctors to shove it if they ever even insinuated turning off the machines. I’ve heard stories of people coming back from a coma after decades. I would happily wait decades for my mum or brothers to wake up and I hope they’d do the same for me

  • My friend has been In a coma for 6 years . He was shot in the head in his own house His family doesn’t wanna pull the plug their strong in religion but I don’t want my friend aging and his son growing up with his dad in a coma with a step dad and his girlfriend moving on Imagine if he wakes up how devestated from the time and stuff thats happening

  • Just yank the plug. The looking around and looks of surprise on that man’s face were most likely just what’s left of his soul trying to hold on. Have you EVER held the hand of someone in a coma? I have had my uncle squeeze mine, all while drool is running down his mouth. He passed away days later. This was like 2005.

  • I was in a medically induced coma for around 9 months in 2012. I remember absolutely nothing. Nothing after January 2012. I have a few memories from 2013 but very vague. I’m my coma I didn’t have dreams or hear anything or respond to anything. I don’t even have memories of recovering. I had to relearn how to do everything but I don’t remember any of the process. So it’s interesting to read the comment here of people that have been in comas and had awareness. I on the other hand lost 2 years of my life. It really does differ between people!

  • 7:19 My Grandpa actually had the same type of functions where he had minimal consciousness, my Grandpa could just watch people walk around him with his eyes but he couldn’t talk or move! He was in a coma for only 6 months tho compared to the 35 year old mans time! But he died sadly a year before I was born in 2001, R.I.P. Grandpa!!

  • I’m already on a ventilator, and have a feeding tube, but have a good neurological functional brain. I have a LOT of medical issues. If I end up in a coma, do Neurological testing. If it is not reversible, PULL THE VENTILATOR, AND LET ME GO! I’d prefer Euthanasia, but people seem to think that human euthanasia is wrong! Don’t put me on ECMO! If I were go end up with cancer, I wouln’t accept treatment! Chemo medications shouldn’t be wasted on somebody who’s got so many medical problems like I do! We’ve had some cancer scares with me already, but it was NOT cancer. But my family knows I DON’T WANT CHEMO OR Radiation therapy. If I develop Guillain Barre Syndrome, I want Plasmapheresis, and hopefully I’ll recover without ARDS, or Pneumonia! If I’m pronounced brain dead, PLEASE, TURN OFF THE VENTILATOR! Don’t wait around for days hoping and praying I’ll recover! I’M NOT GOING TO! There are my wishes! Oh yeah, I WANT TO DIE IN A Stryker InTouch Bed! The Stryker InTouch bed is a WONDERFUL WONDERFUL BED, and It’s where I want to die! When that time comes!

  • MORE COMMUNISM WILL MAKE EVERYONE VERY RICH! I dated this woman who was so stuck up and so in love with herself that she would not answer simple questions like: “Are you going to be in a very deep coma much longer?” & “How long’s your average coma anyway?” & “Will you lend me 700 dollars till you get out of your coma?” & “May I borrow your Honda for a couple of weeks?”

  • I seen on people on Coma’s who wake acer 15 yrs and said that they knew but couldn’t talk communicate at all. But was alive aware in other words. That it was very hard. But beyond glad her family didn’t give up on her. Took her Yrs to walk,talk,etc but she was beyond thankful . To get a second chance.

  • Was in a coma from July 29 2018 to September 12 2018. Family told me I was riding motorcycle with my older brother when he ran a red light truck was approaching and slammed into stop sign. Wasn’t wearing a helmet…. I have no recollection of this happening. I don’t remember being on a motorcycle or the accident. Also I have trouble remembering things and my concentration is bad. Crazy thing is I remember being with my brother that day but not the accident itself.

  • In the summer of 2022 I had a cardiac arrest in front of my girlfriend and our baby daughter the Medics had to carry me down the stairs and do CPR apparently I had my heart stopped for about 10 minutes at least even as they were taking me away in the ambulance I wasn’t quite living again. I then spent about a month in a coma. It has absolutely messed with my whole life I feel so lost right now. I just want to be the one person that I used to be but I don’t know how to get back there.

  • i was in a coma 3 years ago, i was not ware that my eyes were affected from being in a coma not just my brain, From the lack of oxygen from my accident / coma. I have some optic nerve damage from my coma. I didn’t hear anything or was aware of anything. I just woke up in ICU with a tube down my throat. lol man i was not happy about that. My son saved my life.. he’s my hero. i am not going into detail on what happened what caused my coma. 🙂

  • I was in coma twice for suicide attempts.( I have Borderline personality disorder) I was in coma for a week and one time for 4 days. It was Just like sleep. I didn’t hear anything nor did i saw dreams. It was boring.😕😂 After waking up I didn’t formed any memory. I knew everything and was in good state but wasn’t forming any memory. I don’t have any memory of 1 st after waking up from coma. And to be honest For i felt happy and joy after years of emotional pain. And it all went away in two days. Back to self harm and suicidal thoughts 😕

  • I was in an induced coma back on April 15 2020 as a result of seizures and I could not stop. I was sent to a local hospital then transferred to the KU med center for 6 to 7 weeks for many seizures. I had a feeding tube in my stomach ..was adjusted for the right meds then sent to a local rehab center for almost two weeks. I have auto immune encephalitis. I used to be able to live on my own and drive but now I cannot do that .

  • I gotten a coma before and know what it feels like I get out of my body then I see myself and I see normal like a human I’m getting out of my body then lean on the wall and stare at my body and everyone my family picked me up then they took me to a hospital and I hear every single thing and I woke up in a hospital hoping that I would wake up and I was confused but that was years ago

  • 2 years ago I was in coma I was passing the road at the night then the car passing by was at high speed I was already in the middle of the road I thought it was my end but I said no I tried to use the my left arm to lessen the damage and it did but not so much I got my arm broke and I was in serious serious head ache next I woke up is in the hospital I was a sleep for one whole year making me go back in 7th grade and now that driver is still in jail Dunno how long because I’m not really smart but hey I’m okay now I still feel my arm hurts

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