Modern Medicine can keep you alive
Machines, medications and man-made parts: modern medicine continues to find and develop life-saving and life-prolonging interventions.
Advancements in heart research include:
- Bypass surgery
- Man-made implantable cardiac devices like pacemakers
When organs fail, there’s dialysis for kidney failure, and transplants for kidney, lung, liver and heart. Cancer continues to be researched, and survival rates and life expectancy has greatly increased. For neurological (brain) illness and injury, medications and interventions are emerging, and rehab helps with increased function. Even infections – which were regularly the cause of death in past generations – are now treated with antibiotics.
However, as the body winds down, so-called ‘Heroic Measures’ may do more harm than intended. CPR (Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation) Breathing Machines (ventilators), Feeding tubes and specific medications can be considered Heroic Measures or seem more like Futile Treatment. When making decisions about any of these, it can help to understand the longer-term results and possible complications.
Intraveinous (IV)
An IV is used to get fluids and medications intraveinously, which means via the veins. More info: http://wiki.answers.com...
Intubation
A tube is placed into the windpipe (trachea), through the mouth, and you will likely be placed on a breathing machine. More info: nlm.nih.gov...
Palliative Surgery
Aimed at relieving pain and symptoms of disease but not intended to cure the disease. More info: aboutoperations.co.uk...
PEG Feeding
A feeding tube placed through the skin into the stomach through a small hole in the abdomen. Also called Percutaneus Endoscopic Gastronomy, Tube Feeding. More info: on eating and drinking as life winds down