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Doctors: Comatose Man's Brain Rewires

July 4, 2006
By MARILYNN
MARCHIONE
MSNBC Video Link
Doctors have their
first proof that a man who was barely conscious for nearly 20 years
regained speech and movement because his brain spontaneously rewired
itself by growing tiny new nerve connections to replace the ones
sheared apart in a car crash.
Terry Wallis, 42, is
one of the few people known to have recovered so dramatically so long
after a serious brain injury. He still needs help eating and cannot
walk, but his speech continues to improve and he can count to 25
without interruption.
Wallis' sudden
recovery happened three years ago at a rehabilitation center in
Mountain View, Ark., but doctors said the same cannot be hoped for
people in a persistent vegetative state, such as Terri Schiavo, the
Florida woman who died last year after a fierce right-to- die court
battle. Nor do they know how to make others with less serious damage,
like Wallis, recover.
"Right now these
cases are like winning the lottery," said Dr. Ross Zafonte,
rehabilitation chief at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center,
who was not involved in the research. "I wouldn't want to overenthuse
family members or folks who think now we have a cure for this."
Wallis has complete
amnesia about the two decades he spent barely conscious, but remembers
his life before the injury.
"He still thinks
Ronald Reagan is president," his father, Jerry, said in a statement,
adding that until recently his son insisted he was 20 years old.
The research on
Wallis, published Monday in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, was
led by imaging expert Henning Voss and neurologist Dr. Nicholas Schiff
at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York City
and included doctors at JFK Medical Center in Edison, N.J.
Wallis was 19 when he
suffered a traumatic brain injury that left him briefly in a coma and
then in a minimally conscious state, in which he was awake but
uncommunicative other than occasional nods and grunts, for more than
19 years.
"The nerve fibers
from the cells were severed, but the cells themselves remained
intact," unlike Schiavo, whose brain cells had died, said Dr. James
Bernat, a neurologist at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in New
Hampshire, who is familiar with the research.
Nerve cells that have
not died can form new connections; for example, nerves in the arms and
legs can grow about an inch a month after they are severed or damaged.
However, this happens far less often in the brain.
The new research
suggests that instead of the sudden recovery Wallis seemed to make
when he began speaking and moving three years ago, he actually may
have been slowly recovering all along, as nerves in his brain formed
new connections at a glacial pace until enough were present to make a
network.
Researchers used a
new type of brain imaging only available in research settings _ not
ordinary hospitals or rehabilitation centers _ to establish the
regrowth. It tracks the direction of water molecules in and around
brain cells, an indicator of brain activity.
"It's a roadmap of
how the connections are running," Schiff said.
Doctors compared
Wallis' brain function to that of 20 healthy people and another
minimally conscious patient who showed virtually no recovery for six
years. All were imaged twice, 18 months apart.
In Wallis' brain,
"what we first see is how overwhelmingly severe this injury was," with
many abnormalities compared to the healthy people, Schiff said.
The second set of
images showed changes from the first, strongly suggesting that new
connections had formed. These correlated with areas of the brain that
affect the ability to move and talk.
The other minimally
conscious patient _ a 24-year-old man who suffered a severe brain
injury in a car accident when he was 18 _ also had evidence of changes
in nerve connections, but they were not organized in a way that made a
difference in his ability to function.
"We'll have to
understand more about why recovery occurred" in Wallis' case, Zafonte
said. "The question is 'why?' It's not just 'wait.'"
Until that is known,
imaging cannot be used to predict who will recover, or to help
patients' brains rewire, he said.
The Charles A. Dana
Foundation, which finances brain research, funded the scientific work.
The lead author, Voss, also received money from the Cervical Spine
Research Society, whose sponsors include companies that make spine
care products. The British Discovery Channel and HBO paid to fly
Wallis and family members to Cornell for tests.
"Most neurologists
would have been willing to bet money that whatever the cause of it, if
it hadn't changed in 19 years, wasn't going to change now," Bernat
said. "So it's really extraordinary."
Wallis' father said
his son is now able to make jokes. "That was something he wasn't able
to do early in his recovery," Jerry Wallis said. "He now seems almost
exactly like his old self. And he very often tells us how glad he is
to be alive."
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On the Net:
http://www.jci.org
http://www.jci.org/cgi/content/full/116/7/1823
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