Actually starvation after the first few days is not all that painful.
The buildup of ureic compounds in the system have a sedating effect on
the person. So there is little or no pain involved. The Post had an
article about it:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58175-2005Mar22.html

Little Known About Starvation Death

By David Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 23, 2005; Page A05

Unless a court orders that her feeding tube be reinserted, Terri
Schiavo will probably die in the next three weeks of a fatal heart
rhythm brought on by the chemical imbalances that arise from extreme
dehydration, according to several experts on end-of-life medical care.

But, they are quick to add, that is just a guess.

Very little is known about the timing and mechanism of death when food
and water are withheld from people with severe brain damage who are
otherwise in fairly good health. Not many people have that experience.
Studying their deaths is an extremely low priority.

"I usually tell families not to expect that it will necessarily be
very quick," said Joanne Lynn, a researcher at Rand Corp. and an
expert on care of the terminally ill. In her experience, patients who
forgo even water can live as long as 21 days, although most die in
seven to 10. But there is no large series of cases on which to base
predictions because "nobody has actually sat down and studied this."

With advanced dehydration, the functioning of many vital organs --
heart, brain, kidneys, lungs -- worsens. But it is difficult to say
which is first to fail, tipping a person irreversibly toward death,
said Porter Storey, a leader of the American Academy of Hospice and
Palliative Medicine who was the medical director of a hospice in
Houston for 18 years.

"Their breathing slows down, and then their next breath doesn't come,"
he said yesterday. "Does that mean the brain, which sends a signal to
the lungs, goes first? Or does it mean the lungs failed? We do not
precisely know why people die, and it is not something that can be
answered by scientific experiment."

Each day the body produces waste (such as acid, potassium and a
nitrogen-containing compound called urea) that must be excreted in
urine to prevent it from accumulating to toxic levels. To do that, the
kidneys require a minimum volume of water, which they extract from the
blood, in which to dissolve those substances.

When dehydration becomes severe, the kidneys essentially run out of
water to make urine. As production of urine falls, the concentration
of toxins rises.

The effect on organs is varied and profound. Ammonia-like substances
have a sedating effect on the brain. High concentrations of potassium
alter the heartbeat and eventually stop it -- which is the mechanism
of the injection used for execution.

Whatever the mechanism of death, experts are virtually unanimous in
saying it does not appear to be painful.

"You go into a uremic coma. You go into a stuporous state, and you
stay that way until you die," said William A. Knaus, who co-directed
the intensive care unit at George Washington University Medical Center
for 20 years and is now at the University of Virginia. "There is
absolutely no indication that the body reacts to this with stress."

Storey said that in his hospice practice he has "sat at the bedside of
thousands of patients as they died, and many of them could tell me how
they were feeling when they had gone weeks without eating and
drinking." What they told him, he said, was that they did not feel bad
at all. Their chief discomfort was a dry mouth. That could be relieved
by sips of water or by swabbing the mouth with a water-soaked sponge.

Exactly what hastens death and what makes it more or less tolerable is
largely unknown.

Lynn, a geriatrics specialist in suburban Maryland who also serves in
the organization Americans for Better Care of the Dying, said
end-of-life care is full of beliefs and practices untested by
research.

For example, doctors do not know what the best form of sedation is for
people suffocating from respiratory failure. Most physicians believe
that liberal use of morphine hastens death. But it may not. People who
receive it may actually survive longer.

"Nobody has studied it because nobody cares. There is not a National
Institute of Advanced Illness," she said.

Part of the resistance comes from a belief that the dying should be
beyond the reach of medical experimentation.

Storey said he once proposed a clinical trial to determine whether
giving hospice patients intravenous fluids made them more comfortable.
One group would be assigned to get the fluids while another would take
only the fluids they wanted by mouth. Storey was then going to survey
them about how they felt.

Hospices, however, generally frown on IV lines as invasive devices
best left behind when a cure is no longer possible. Storey said the
review committee at his institution rejected his protocol, saying it
was unethical.

(c) 2005 The Washington Post Company

--- On Wednesday, March 23, 2005 12:23 PM, Ken Ketsdever scribed: ---
>
> My biggest issue with all of this is letting her suffer.  Either keep
> the tube in and let her live or kill her as humanely as possible. A
> simple injection and she slips away.  But the idea of letting her
> starve to death slowly dying over days or weeks is just hideous.
>

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Purchase Dreamweaver with Homesite Plus from House of Fusion, a Macromedia 
Authorized Affiliate and support the CF community.
http://www.houseoffusion.com/banners/view.cfm?bannerid=54

Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:151407
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5
Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54

Reply via email to