Chilling are the stories of people who, having to undergo surgery, wake up during an operation and describe a range of sensations, including suffocation, paralysis and pain. Carol Weiher lived it and his story has been the best known of these cases.
The horrible story of Carol Weiher: wake up during surgery
Reston, Virginia resident Carol Weihrer, inadvertently woke up during an eye surgery in 1998, a rare phenomenon called "intraoperative perception". Since then, he has been struggling with posttraumatic stress disorder, according to CNN.
Carol claims to have «had to sleep in a recliner for the past few years, "because if your body remains lying flat, " memories come from the operating table ".
"She was awake, but paralyzed" , says Carol, who emphasizes that "he could hear when the surgeon told his apprentice to cut deeper into the eye ».
« I was screaming, but nobody could hear me. I didn't feel pain, just a feeling of tiron. I tried to move my toes or even get off the table.operations, but I couldn't move.I thought I was dying, "Carol adds.
Weiher's experience led her to become an anesthesia victim activist.
According to a study published in the Anaesthesia journal that I cite CNN, in which researchers surveyed more than 3 million patients who received general anesthesia in the United Kingdom and Ireland, approximately one of every 19,600 of those undergoing operations "accidentally" wake up during surgery.
Most of the incidents of intraoperative perception occurred among patients who had been given paralyzing medications as part of their anesthetic cocktail, because could not move to alert the doctors that they were regaining consciousness.
Intraoperative perception is more likely to occur when patients are anesthetized before starting surgery or after the surgery is over, not at the moment the surgeon is operating.
The consequences of this failure are diverse, but among the most common is the disorder of post-traumatic stress with which Carol Weihrer has claimed to live and for which began an Anesthesia Awareness campaign , to educate people about the dangers of waking up during surgery.
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Image: Eduardo Garcia Cruz
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