Wednesday, 24 April 2019 05:28

Mother wakes up from a 27-year coma after car crash

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A woman from United Arab Emirates has regained consciousness after spending 27 years in a vegetative state.  

Munira Abdulla was aged 32 when she suffered a traumatic brain injury after the car she was riding in was hit by a bus near Al Ain in 1991. 

But last year, following rehabilitation in , she began to make noises as she tried to call out to son Omar after hearing him arguing in her hospital room.

Days later she uttered his name for the first time in decades, and now she is able to recite prayers and hold conversations with her loved ones.

Omar revealed her miraculous recovery in an interview with , describing how he was 'flying with joy' when she began speaking again.

He described how the accident occurred when he was four years old and needed to be brought home from kindergarten because there were no buses available.

Ms Abdulla's brother-in-law drove her to school to collect Omar and the family were driving home, with mother and child in the back seat, when they were hit by the bus.

What did she miss? 

Ms Abdulla fell into a vegetative state in 1991 before regaining consciousness last year.

Here are some of the events she will have missed in that time:

1991:The collapse of the Soviet Union

1993:Internet launched to the public

1994:OJ Simpson murder trial

1997:Death of Princess Diana 

2001:First iPod launched

2003:America invades Iraq 

2007: First iPhone launched 

2009:Michael Jackson dies

2011:Osama bin Laden is killed

2013: Nelson Mandela dies

2016: Donald Trump elected 

As the bus hit, Ms Abdulla threw herself around her son to protect him from the impact. While she suffered a severe head injury, he escaped with just a bruise.

Omar described how his mother was left untreated for hours because the family were unable to call for help, before she was transferred to a clinic in London.

There, doctors diagnosed a vegetative state, meaning she was completely unresponsive but able to feel pain.

She was transferred back to the UAE and put on a ventilator and feeding tube to keep her alive, spending the next few decades hooked up to machines.

But in April 2017, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, heard of her case and gave her family a grant for treatment.

Ms Abdulla was flown to Germany where she underwent surgeries to repair her muscles while being given medication to improve her sleep patterns.

Around a year later she began making strange sounds, and within three days she called out to Omar using his name.

'It was her! She was calling my name, I was flying with joy; for years I have dreamt of this moment, and my name was the first word she said,' he said.

Now, she is able to call the names of her loved ones, recite prayers and hold conversations with people.

A medical report issued from Mafraq Hospital last month says that she is 'currently able to communicate with self and surrounding in a very reasonable manner especially in familiar situations.'

However, the report adds that she still needs regular physiotherapy to treat issues with her muscles. 

 

MailOnline


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