| Literature DB >> 22339807 |
Ari R Joffe1, Natalie R Anton, Jonathan P Duff, Allan Decaen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neurologists often diagnose brain death (BD) and explain BD to families in the intensive care unit. This study was designed to determine whether neurologists agree with the standard concept of death (irreversible loss of integrative unity of the organism) and understand the state of the brain when BD is diagnosed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22339807 PMCID: PMC3310851 DOI: 10.1186/2110-5820-2-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Responses to the question on conceptual reasons to explain why brain death is equivalent to death
| Conceptual reason | Neurologist responses (n = 192) | 95% Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|
| Higher brain concept | 93 (48%) | 41-55% |
| Irreversible loss of consciousness | 82 (43%) | 36-50% |
| Irreversible loss of the soul or "essence" of humans | 39 (20%) | 15-27% |
| Irreversible loss of "personhood" | 43 (22%) | 17-29% |
| Irreversible loss of the integration of body functions by the brain | 52 (27%) | 21-34% |
| Prognosis concept | 59 (31%) | 25-38% |
| The certainty of cardiac arrest within hours or days | 14 (7%) | 4-12% |
| Further care is futile and/or degrading | 53 (28%) | 22-34% |
| Restatement of loss of brain function (the criterion) | 169 (88%) | 83-92% |
| Irreversible loss of the function of the entire brain/brainstem | 140 (73%) | 66-79% |
| Irreversible loss of the critical functions of the entire brain/brainstem | 105 (55%) | 48-62% |
| Irreversible destruction of the brain, including the brainstem | 109 (57%) | 50-64% |
| Irreversible loss of the capacity for consciousness plus irreversible loss of the capacity to breathe | 83 (43%) | 36-50% |
| Cessation of the vital work of the organism | 22 (12%) | 8-17% |
The exact question asked was as follows: "Which of the following is/are an acceptable conceptual reason to explain why 'brain death' is equivalent to 'death'?." Respondents could choose more than one answer; each answer had to be "a stand-alone reason." The standard medical, ethical, and legal conceptual reason is: the irreversible loss of the integration of body functions by the brain [1-4,10,11].
The objective findings that respondents considered would not be compatible with brain death
| Finding | This would not be compatible with brain death (n = 192) [n (%; 95% confidence interval)] | |
|---|---|---|
| Some EEG activity | 135 (70%; 63-76%)) | > 20% |
| Some evoked potential activity | 107 (56%; 49-63%) | > 5% |
| Some cerebral blood flow | 99 (52%; 45-59%) | > 5-40% |
| Some pituitary hormones | 17 (9%; 6-14%) | > 50% |
| Normal brainstem pathology | 36 (19%; 14-25%) | > 10-40% |
| None of the above | 34 (18%; 13-24%) | Unknown |
| Brainstem minimal damage | 81 (42%; 35-49%) | > 5-40% |
| Cerebral cortex minimal damage | 63 (33%; 27-40%) | > 5-40% |
| Damage but not respirator brain | 27 (14%; 10-20%) | > 5-40% |
| Widespread necrosis | 1 (1%; 0-3%) | > 50% |
| None of the above | 93 (48%; 41-55%) | Unknown |
EEG = electroencephalogram
The standard medical, ethical, and legal tests for brain death only require clinical bedside tests; EEG, brainstem evoked potential, brain blood flow, or pituitary hormone testing are not required nor recommended [1,5,7,8,11,24,25]. In addition, brain pathology is not obtained as part of the diagnosis of brain death.
Response to the question about what, in the respondent's own words, makes a patient dead
| Concept given to justify why brain death is death | Neurologist responses (n = 192) [n (%; 95% confidence interval)] | Neurologists who agreed the conceptual basis makes brain death equivalent to death (n = 133) [n (%; 95% confidence interval)] |
|---|---|---|
| Higher brain concept | 63 (33%; 27-40%) | 52 (39%; 31-48%) |
| Loss of integration of body concept | 15 (8%; 5-13%) | 13 (10%; 6-16%) |
| Loss of integration alone | 7 (4%; 2-7%) | 7 (5%; 2-11%) |
| Loss of integration combined with higher brain concept | 8 (4%; 2-8%) | 6 (5%; 2-10%) |
| Prognosis concept | 9 (5%; 2-9%) | 5 (4%; 1-9%) |
| Prognosis of death certain | 7 (4%; 2-7%) | 3 (2%; 1-7%) |
| Quality of life statement | 2 (1%; 0-4%) | 2 (2%; 0-6%) |
| No concept given | 96 (50%; 43-57%) | 59 (44%; 36-53%) |
| Re-statement only: loss of brain function (the criterion) | 32 (17%; 12-23%) | 23 (17%; 12-25%) |
| No response (blank) | 64 (33%; 27-40%) | 36 (27%; 20-35%) |
| Vital work of organism concept | 4 (2%; 1-5%) | 0 (0%; 0-2%) |
| Other | 9 (5%; 2-9%) | 4 (3%; 1-8%) |
The exact question was as follows: "This patient fulfills all brain death criteria unequivocally including the suitable interval. Conceptually, why are they dead (i.e., in your own words, what is it about loss of brain function including the brainstem that makes this patient dead)?" The standard medical, ethical, and legal conceptual reason is (as defined by the President's Commission and neurologist groups): the irreversible loss of the integration of body functions by the brain [1-4,10,11].
Responses were: "cannot independently sustain itself"; "irreversible loss of interaction with the environment and no ability to function"; "no longer capable of any activity that leads to self preservation"; and "the organism is no longer capable of interacting with the environment internally or externally."
Conceptual and empirical arguments in favor of brain death, and problems with those arguments
| The conceptual or empirical arguments in favor of brain death | Problems with the argument |
|---|---|
| Irreversible loss of integrative unity of the organism as a whole | Integrative unity continues during BD: there are many reports of gestation of a fetus, waste detoxification and excretion, assimilation of nutrients, fighting of infections, wound healing, proportionate growth, and sexual maturation [ |
| A central integrator is not required: embryos are alive [ | |
| Irreversible loss of personhood, consciousness, or moral agency (higher brain) | Consciousness is not the dividing line between life and death: irreversible vegetative state, anencephaly, and if moral agency is required, infants and the severely demented are not considered already dead (appropriate for burial, cremation, autopsy, or organ recovery) [ |
| Although consciousness may be a sign of ongoing integration, it can be lost with continued integration of the organism as a whole [ | |
| Poor quality of life or certainty of cardiac arrest | Conflate prognosis of death with a diagnosis of death. A prognosis of lack of recovery of neurological function is not a diagnosis of death. |
| Irreversible loss of the vital external work of an organism interacting with the environment to obtain what it needs | Brain-dead bodies |
| Brain dead bodies | |
| Brain dead bodies | |
| The goal of external work is to sustain the "capacity for internal integrative unity": external work is "a second-order activity mandated by the primary work of an organism, the maintenance of internal homeostasis [ | |
| Irreversible loss of the function (or the critical functions) of the entire brain, irreversible destruction of the brain, or irreversible loss of the capacity for consciousness and breathing. | These simply restate the criterion of brain death; they do not give a concept of death to justify the criterion being death itself. |
| Residual functions detected in brain death are actually mere activities (of "nests" of cells) and not functions. | The brain is too complex an organ to simply make this ad hoc and likely incorrect claim [ |
| The spatial resolution of EEG suggests there is widespread neuronal activity when EEG activity is detected, potentially performing functions 317. | |
| Evoked potential activity is due to transduction of ambient energy into electrochemical signals conducted to the brain, suggestive of a function 317. | |
| Neuroendocrine control maintains free water homeostasis, suggestive of a function 34617. | |
| Residual functions detected in brain death are insignificant functions. | This claim is ad hoc (without a clear reason): why are pupillary and corneal reflexes significant functions reflecting integration of the organism as a whole, while EEG activity, evoked potential activity, neuroendocrine control, and breathing at a PaCO2 of 80 mmHg are not [ |
| Residual functions are neither critical nor clinical functions, and BD is a clinical diagnosis. | This claim is ad hoc (without a clear reason): how to define critical, and why these must be clinical functions is not explained [ |
| The clinical versus nonclinical distinction is irrelevant: neurologists' epistemic access to a function is not a relevant consideration to diagnosis of a critical function [ | |
| The clinical versus nonclinical distinction is false: neuroendocrine control can be diagnosed at the bedside by observing lack of polyuria [ | |
| The critical versus noncritical distinction is circular: critical functions are necessary for maintenance of life, and death is the loss of critical functions, is a trivial tautologous argument [ | |
| Residual functions are not critical because they are replaceable mechanically. | Breathing can be replaced mechanically and, therefore, is not a critical brain function. Like the dialysis machine replacing spontaneous kidney function, the ventilator replacing spontaneous brainstem control of breathing is irrelevant as to whether an organism is dead [ |
| Only consciousness cannot be replaced mechanically and, therefore, this is only an argument for a consciousness based (not integration, or vital external work based) concept of death [ | |
BD = brain death; EEG = electroencephalogram.