No, the brain dead body cannot hear because there is no activity of the nervous system. The ears must have the nervous system functioning and the brain to perceive sound. The person's Spirit might hear you in the room if he or she is there but usually they leave the body right way and leave earth.
Yes they do even tho there may be little or no( Neurological) brain activity they are still aging even in a vegatitave state you still age.
A person may go into a diabetic coma if their blood sugar levels become dangerously high (hyperglycemia) or low (hypoglycemia). This can happen due to factors such as not taking insulin or medication as prescribed, consuming excessive amounts of sugar, or experiencing illness or stress that affects blood sugar levels. A diabetic coma is a serious medical emergency that requires immediate treatment.
I have researched this phenomena quite a bit though I do not practice medicine I believe it is still somewhat of a mystery. Some people dream and some do not. Alot of people can actually hear their surroundings while in the coma state which can be incorporated into their dream. One man had been in a coma for two months after a car accident and his wife inquired about the experience, he said his dreams were extremely lucid, like a parallel existence. In fact, he was heard by the staff to actual yell seemingly random things out, but when he came to they later deciphered that he was expressing himself in his 'dream' and as people talk in their sleep so did he. One of his comments was about a baseball player trade, while in his coma the tv in his room was on that announced the trade, this angered him and caused him to not only dream about his reactions but comment on the subject without being conscious of it. D.J. Newville
By definition being unconcious means that your senses are not applied to a situation, so no.As a rule, yes. Hearing works all the time, to the point of even working in comatose people sometimes.Whether an unconscious person can hear may vary in different situations and depending on the injury.
This depends entirely on how well a person hears. Some people will not hear the ticking of a clock if they are standing right next to it, while others will hear it in the next room or beyond if it is quiet enough.
There are stories of people who are in coma's that can still hear. These people try to communicate with their loved ones and doctors but cannot.
Yes there is, during the state of a coma the person is able to hear but not see feel or anything else but hear
The other character could be in some sort of a coma and the first character is talking to them because the still hold on to the hope that the character in the coma can still hear them.
No. Coma means total unconsciousness.
It means that the patient is in a coma or unconscious. If the heart is not beating then the person might have past away. :(
it is still coma but it is different to say
No, death pretty much trumps coma...a person won't be in a coma after they die. You might have some evidence, in the form of bedsores and wasting, that the person had lingered in a coma if the coma persisted for some extended time prior to death. .
A coma is when a person is unconscious. A stupor is when someone is still conscious, but typically only reacts to base stimulus such as pain. Their eyes are somewhat responsive and may follow objects.
No. Exams of patients with encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) usually reveal a drowsy or confused patient but not in a coma. A person in a coma state can not be aroused.
The brain is constantly working even if a person is in a coma. The only reason this would change is because the person has gone brain dead and the brain is no longer producing waves of activity.
yes they can.
There are several different ways a person can end up in a coma due to a brain injury. A person can go into a coma if the brains swells or bleeds after the injury.