Jahi Family: Examining Neurologist Finds She’s Alive
By Wesley J. SmithWhen last we visited the Jahi McMath case, a judge gave her mother the chance to file an amended complaint showing that Jahi is alive, with the assurance that if properly pleaded, evidence of life could be brought She seems to have done just that.
From Thaddeus Mason Pope’s blog Medical Futility, quoting the amended complaint:
30. Since the Certificate of
Death was issued, Jahi has been examined by a physician duly licensed to
practice in the State of California who is an experienced pediatric
neurologist with triple Board Certifications in Pediatrics, Neurology
(with special competence in Child Neurology), and lectroencephalography.
The physician has a sub-specialty in brain death and has published and
lectured extensively on the topic, both nationally and internationally.
This physician has personally examined Jahi and has reviewed a number of
her medical records and studies performed, including an MRI/MRA done at
Rutgers University Medical Center on September 26, 2014. This doctor
has also examined 22 videotapes of Jahi responding to specific requests
to respond and move…
34. The female menstrual cycle
involves hormonal interaction between the hypothalamus (part of the
brain), the pituitary gland, and the ovaries. Other aspects of pubertal
development also require hypothalamic function. Corpses do not
menstruate. Neither do corpses undergo sexual maturation. There is no
precedent in the medical literature of a brain dead body developing the
onset of menarche and the larche.
35. Based upon the pediatric
neurologist’s evaluation of Jahi, Jahi no longer fulfills standard brain
death criteria on account of her ability to specifically respond to
stimuli. The distinction between random cord-originating movements and
true responses to command is extremely important for the diagnosis of
brain death. Jahi is capable of intermittently responding intentionally
to a verbal command.
36. In the opinion of the
pediatric neurologist who has examined Jahi, having spent hours with her
and reviewed numerous videotapes of her, that time has proven that Jahi
has not followed the trajectory of imminent total body deterioration
and collapsed that was predicted back in December of 2013, based on the
diagnosis of brain death. Her brain is alive in the neuropathological
sense and it is not necrotic. At this time, Jahi does not fulfill
California’s statutory definition of death, which requires the
irreversible absence of all brain function, because she exhibits
hypothalamic function and intermittent responsiveness to verbal
commands.
If the neurologist testifies to what the complaint says–and if he or she has the credentials claimed–history could be made.
Stay tuned…
Editor’s note. This appeared on Wesley’s great blog.
Source: NRLC News
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