| Literature DB >> 34625089 |
Ari R Joffe1,2, Gurpreet Khaira3, Allan R de Caen3.
Abstract
Brain death has been accepted worldwide medically and legally as the biological state of death of the organism. Nevertheless, the literature has described persistent problems with this acceptance ever since brain death was described. Many of these problems are not widely known or properly understood by much of the medical community. Here we aim to clarify these issues, based on the two intractable problems in the brain death debates. First, the metaphysical problem: there is no reason that withstands critical scrutiny to believe that BD is the state of biological death of the human organism. Second, the epistemic problem: there is no way currently to diagnose the state of BD, the irreversible loss of all brain functions, using clinical tests and ancillary tests, given potential confounders to testing. We discuss these problems and their main objections and conclude that these problems are intractable in that there has been no acceptable solution offered other than bare assertions of an 'operational definition' of death. We present possible ways to move forward that accept both the metaphysical problem - that BD is not biological death of the human organism - and the epistemic problem - that as currently diagnosed, BD is a devastating neurological state where recovery of sentience is very unlikely, but not a confirmed state of irreversible loss of all [critical] brain functions. We argue that the best solution is to abandon the dead donor rule, thus allowing vital organ donation from patients currently diagnosed as BD, assuming appropriate changes are made to the consent process and to laws about killing.Entities:
Keywords: Brain Death; Dead Donor Rule; Epistemology; Higher Brain Death; Metaphysics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34625089 PMCID: PMC8500820 DOI: 10.1186/s13010-021-00107-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Ethics Humanit Med ISSN: 1747-5341 Impact factor: 2.464
Timeline of influential authors that explicitly make the BD Hypothesis the standard medical and legal rationale for why BD has been accepted as a criterion for death of the organism
| Reference; year | Significance | Statement | Page numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Korein; 1978 [ | A main member of the medical consultants to the President’s Commission explaining, for a scientific forum on death, the standard concept of why brain death is equivalent to death | If the critical system, i.e., the brain, in a man is destroyed, the human organism is no longer in a state of minimal entropy production; its state will progressively become more disorganized by spontaneous irreversible fluctuations… irreversible cardiac arrest will inevitably follow regardless of maintenance of all resuscitative procedures… most often these final irreversible changes occur prior to 48 hours and even 24 hours after brain death. | 26-27 |
| Defining death: medical, legal and ethical issues in the determination of death; 1981 [ | The President’s Commission that explicitly explained the concept of why brain death is equivalent to biological death | What was formerly a person is now a dead body and can be socially and legally treated as such. Although absence of breathing and heartbeat may often have been spoken of as "defining" death, review of history and of current medical and popular understanding makes clear that these were merely evidence for the disintegration of the organism as a whole, as discussed in Chapter Three. | 58 |
| The first focuses on the integrated functioning of the body's major organ systems, while recognizing the centrality of the whole brain, since it is neither revivable nor replaceable. The other identifies the functioning of the whole brain as the hallmark of life because the brain is the regulator of the body's integration. | 32 | ||
| On this view, death is that moment at which the body's physiological system ceases to constitute an integrated whole. Even if life continues in individual cells or organs, life of the organism as a whole requires complex integration, and without the latter, a person cannot properly be regarded as alive. | 33 | ||
| This view gives the brain primacy not merely as the sponsor of consciousness (since even unconscious persons may be alive), but also as the complex organizer and regulator of bodily functions. (Indeed, the "regulatory" role of the brain in the organism can be understood in terms of thermodynamics and information theory). Only the brain can direct the entire organism. Artificial support for the heart and lungs, which is required only when the brain can no longer control them, cannot maintain the usual synchronized integration of the body. | 34 | ||
| [Absent all brain functions] even with extraordinary medical care, [vital] functions cannot be sustained indefinitely – typically, no longer than several days. | 35 | ||
| The bifurcated legal standard for determining death: does it work; 1999 [ | Alexander Capron, a drafter of the UDDA, explaining why brain death and cardiocirculatory criteria both meet the standard concept of death | …confirmed the existing concept of death as a phenomenon diagnosable by the two alternative methods… The circle of integrated functioning was broken, however it was assessed. | 125 |
| …crystalizes the contemporary understanding of death because it illustrates how some of an organism’s vital parts remain functional even though the organism has died, namely, lost its ability to perform as an integrated whole because some essential element (typically, the brain) can no longer function and cannot be replaced. | 126 | ||
Controversies in the determination of death: a white paper by the President’s Council on Bioethics; 2008 [ | The President’s Council that explicitly re-addressed the standard concept of why brain death is equivalent to death | The neurological standard’s early defenders were not wrong to seek such a principle of wholeness. They may have been mistaken, however, in focusing on the loss of somatic integration as the critical sign that the organism is no longer a whole. They interpreted—plausibly but perhaps incorrectly— “an organism as a whole” to mean “an organism whose parts are working together in an integrated way.” | 59-60 |
| Interdisciplinary panel convened with support from the Health Resources and Services Administration Division of Transplantation; 2010 [ | An international panel convened to address whether donation after cardiocirculatory death donors meet the standard concept of death | In its 1981 report Defining Death, the U.S. President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research provided the most frequently cited comprehensive analysis. Defining Death had three principal goals: 1) to provide a conceptual basis for the new medical practice of death determination using neurological tests… | 963 |
American Academy of Neurology multisociety quality improvement intitiative, 2018 [ | A summit “to address, and potentially correct, aspects of brain death determination within the purview of medical practice that may have contributed to these lawsuits” | After an extensive review, the Commission concluded that brain death should be endorsed as legal death, and produced the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA)… | 424 |
| Just as cardiopulmonary death is determined when there is irreversible loss of circulatory and respiratory function, brain death is defined by irreversible loss of consciousness and brainstem function leading to the inability to breathe independent of artificial support, and ultimately results in the demise and decay of all organ systems. | 426 |
Published cases of reversibility of at least one absent brainstem function occurring after the diagnosis of brain death
| Reference | Age | Apnea test done | EEG result | CBF result | Brain Imaging result | Details of the case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kohrman et al, 1990 [ | 3 months | Yes | ECS | Present on day 6, after the BD diagnosis | Diffuse cerebral edema | Found apneic in crib, requiring CPR. On day 4 and 24 hours later fulfilled BD criteria. Four hours after the second exam developed sucking movements. Over the next 3 days regained eye opening, facial grimacing, eye movements, and corneal reflexes for 30 days until death. |
| Haun et al, 1991 [ | 3 months | Yes | ECS | Not done | Normal on presentation | Found unresponsive between bed and wall requiring CPR. On day 4 and 24 hours later fulfilled BD criteria. Eight minutes after extubation had spontaneous regular breathing. |
| Okamato et al, 1995 [ | 3 months | Yes | ECS | Present on day 19, after the BD diagnosis | Severe atrophy on day 19 | Hypoglycemia and apnea requiring CPR. On day 3 and 5 fulfilled BD criteria. Regained spontaneous respirations on day 43 until death on day 71. |
| Shewmon, 2018 [ | 2 years | Stopped at PaCO2 58 mmHg due to desaturation | Likely ECS | CPP zero for several hours. Absent DPTA flow. | Massive cerebral edema with herniation | Severe TBI. Diagnosed BD at 72 hours: met all criteria for BD (ancillary CBF test done because apnea test could not be completed). After extubation had spontaneous breathing. |
| Roberts et al, 2010 [ | 26 years | Yes | Not done | Present on MRI in MCA, after the BD diagnosis | Uncal and tonsillar herniation with generalized cerebral edema | Mastoiditis and temporal lobe abscess, with normal otoscopy. At 7 hours fulfilled BD criteria. In operating room at 28 hours regained spontaneous breathing. |
| Webb et al, 2011 [ | 55 years | Yes | ECS | Absent at hour 200, after the BD diagnosis | Diffuse cerebral edema | Cardiac arrest, cooled to <35 degrees for up to 10 hours until hour 55. At hour 72 and 78 met all criteria for BD. In operating room at hour 98 had cough, corneal reflexes, and spontaneous breathing. |
| Latorre et al, 2020 [ | 59 years | No, due to hemodynamic instability | Not done | Absent on SPECT | Intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral edema, transtentorial and tonsillar brain herniation | Catastrophic spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage. Clinical exam at 51 hours compatible with BD, but no apnea test done. Tc-99m Bicisate SPECT scan at 52 hours confirmed absent uptake. “The following morning” he had “cough, intermittent spontaneous respirations, and extensor posturing of the right arm and leg to noxious stimulation.” |
BD brain death, CBF cerebral blood flow, CPP cerebral perfusion pressure, CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation, ECS electrocerebral silence, EEG electroencephalogram, MCA middle cerebral artery, TBI traumatic brain injury
The Metaphysical Problem with brain death, and outline of objections with their main replies
| Argument | Objection | Replies |
|---|---|---|
| The Brain Death Hypothesis is false: we observe continued integration and homeostasis of the organism as a whole | Define death as loss of the ‘fundamental vital work’ of a living organism | -Not a scientific theory: the fundamental “drive” and unconscious “felt need” to continue to exist as an organism implies a ‘vital principle’ or ‘soul’. -Defined exclusively in terms of externally directed work: but, the goal of external work is to sustain the capacity for internal integrative unity [homeostasis]. -Does not serve the ad-hoc purpose for which it was constructed: the BD patient does demonstrate ‘openness to the world’, does ‘act upon the world to obtain what it needs’, and does demonstrate the ‘basic non-conscious felt need that drives the organism to act as it must, to obtain what it needs’. |
| Integration is merely artificially maintained by the ventilator | -The ventilator is not causally sufficient for heartbeat or gas exchange: it simply blows air into the bronchial tree, and the integrated organism does all the rest. -The ventilator is causally necessary for the heartbeat and gas exchange: but so are many other functions that, when replaced, do not result in merely artificial integration. -Consciousness may be a ‘sui generis’ emergent property; however, it does not follow that, and is ad-hoc to assert that, some other [replaceable by technology] brain neurophysiologic functions are critical simply because the brain also generates consciousness. | |
| Define death as loss of personhood [higher-brain death] | -Still leaves the death of the integrated living biological organism as a whole to occur. -Another view is ‘Animalism’: personhood may only be a phase of our existence. -Unwelcome implications: the PVS patient is already dead and should be treated as such; I could never fall into a PVS; removing life-support from a patient in PVS would not kill one of us or violate the rights of any person; I was never a fetus; early abortion would not kill one of us or violate the rights of any person. | |
| Assert an operational definition of death as BD | -Dismisses long history of rigorous characterization of the biological death of an organism. -Misrepresents what philosophy is about: the goal of philosophy is to ensure clarity, logical consistency, and rational argumentation to arrive at reasoned conclusions. -Not science: void of any empirical or testable content. -Existential assertions are not socially constructed. | |
| Propose a homeostatic property cluster account of death | -The cases used to suggest current definitions conflict with our “best intuitions” are flawed. -Not much of a cluster: the same consciousness [‘personhood’], and biological organism [integration; all the rest of the properties] controversy. -Why accept that cluster: based on framing bias, and thus begs the question. -Based on raw intuitions: but, it is better to subject these to critical scrutiny. -Ignores the implication that the fetus is dead. |
BD brain death, PVS irreversible permanent vegetative state
The Epistemic Problems with brain death, and outline of objections with their main replies
| Argument | Objections | Replies |
|---|---|---|
| Argument 1: Bedside tests do not confirm the loss of all brain functions: ongoing EEG, EP, and hypothalamic functions, stress responses, breathing at higher PaCO2, brainstem reflexes (often incorrectly labelled as ‘spinal’) | BD has withstood the test of time | -Circular: BD inevitably leads to withdrawal of life support. -False: cases of reversibility are reported (see Table -Wrong question: not about the prognosis of BD, but about whether BD is death |
| Residual functions are not critical or clinical | -Ad hoc: why are pupillary reaction and corneal reflexes critical (reflecting ongoing integrative unity of the organism), while EEG and EP functions, neuroendocrine control, and breathing at PaCO2 well over 60mmHg are not? -Circular: “critical functions are necessary for life, and death is the loss of critical functions” -False: neuroendocrine control is a clinical function (just observe urine output) -Self-defeating: only an argument for higher BD [the only function that cannot be replaced mechanically is consciousness] | |
| Argument 2: bedside tests cannot diagnose the loss of all brain functions due to: confounders in all or an unknown number of cases [spinal cord injury during brain herniation; possible total locked-in syndrome; central thyroid and adrenal insufficiency; possible global ischemic penumbra; vaguely described other confounders]; apnea testing being contraindicated, self-fulfilling, and not fit for purpose [does not diagnose loss of medullary function] | Similar to BD, other diagnoses are made according to clinical judgment | -Not appropriate for the diagnosis of death: a final irreversible state with implications that leave no room for error |
| An ancillary test can confirm the diagnosis of BD | -EEG: only tests for superficial cortical function -Radionuclide CBF test: poorly studied in terms of specificity for diagnosis of BD versus other severe brain/brainstem injuries. Cases reported of absent CBF with retained brain functions [including EEG, posturing, head-turning, and breathing]. -Unknown prevalence of global ischemic penumbra: Jahi McMath had absent CBF, but lack of brain destruction on MRI and may have emerged to the minimally conscious state. | |
| Similar to epistemic claims about methods to diagnose death by circulatory criteria | -Tests to diagnose circulatory death are not debated; rather, when the irreversibility of circulatory death occurs is debated |
BD brain death, CBF cerebral blood flow, EEG electroencephalogram, EP evoked potential, MRI magnetic resonance imaging
Potential ways forward that accept both the intractable metaphysical and epistemic problems with brain death
| Potential solution | Pro | Con | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accept higher BD: death of the person | -Likely correct: compatible with the transplant intuition, the remnant person problem, and considerations of conjoined twinning | -Unacceptable implications for some: religions [is the human person separable from the human organism], and society [irreversible PVS, early fetus, and possibly neonates are not alive, and thus have no rights] | Likely not acceptable |
| Accept BD as a legal fiction | -Treat the BD as analogous to the dead in law, as they lack an interest in continued existence | -Legal fictions are known to be fictions: would need to acknowledge that BD is not really death -The reason for the analogy would also apply to higher BD, raising the problems above | Likely not acceptable |
| Abandon the dead donor rule | -Acknowledges the metaphysical and epistemic problems -Respects non-maleficence (duty to do no harm) and autonomy (duty to obtain informed consent) -Maintains trust in medicine by being trustworthy | -Need to acknowledge the analogy to withdrawal of life-support as a form of justified killing, and thus not murder -Possible adverse effect on organ donation rates and trust in organ donation (and medicine) | Likely acceptable |
BD brain death, PVS permanent vegetative state