Responding to smell good sign in unconscious patients, scientists find
by Nicola Davis from Science | The Guardian on (#52TRK)
Research may lead to simple tool to make prognoses for people with brain injuries
Wafting the scent of rotten fish or shampoo under the nose of a patient with severe brain injury could help doctors determine their level of consciousness - and their chances of long-term survival.
Scientists say patients are more likely to take a sniff of the odours if they are in a minimally conscious, rather than an unresponsive, state, but if the latter do respond to smell, it bodes well.
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