me hoppzor.com

random internet gatherings of sarah hopp, neuroscientist, artist, MIT alumna, Ohio State graduate student, music lover, cat owner, experimental chef/baker, and silly hat extraordinaire.
longreads:


The first report of a zolpidem awakening came from South Africa, in 1999. A patient named Louis Viljoen, who, three years before, was declared vegetative after he was hit by a truck, had taken to clawing at his mattress during the night. Thinking he was suffering from insomnia, his family doctor suggested zolpidem to help him sleep. But 20 minutes after his mother ground the tablet up and fed it to him through a straw, Viljoen began to stir. His eyes, which normally wandered the room, vacant and unfocused, flickered with the light of consciousness. And then he began to talk (his first words were “Hello, Mummy”), and move (he could control his limbs and facial muscles). A few hours later he became unresponsive. But the next day, and for many days after that, zolpidem revived him, a few hours at a time.

“A Drug That Wakes the Near Dead.” — Jeneen Interlandi, New York Times Magazine
See more #longreads from The New York Times

this has been a common theme lately in stories of vegetative states. it’s an interesting neuroscience problem.
also, I enjoy crying.

longreads:

The first report of a zolpidem awakening came from South Africa, in 1999. A patient named Louis Viljoen, who, three years before, was declared vegetative after he was hit by a truck, had taken to clawing at his mattress during the night. Thinking he was suffering from insomnia, his family doctor suggested zolpidem to help him sleep. But 20 minutes after his mother ground the tablet up and fed it to him through a straw, Viljoen began to stir. His eyes, which normally wandered the room, vacant and unfocused, flickered with the light of consciousness. And then he began to talk (his first words were “Hello, Mummy”), and move (he could control his limbs and facial muscles). A few hours later he became unresponsive. But the next day, and for many days after that, zolpidem revived him, a few hours at a time.

“A Drug That Wakes the Near Dead.” — Jeneen Interlandi, New York Times Magazine

See more #longreads from The New York Times

this has been a common theme lately in stories of vegetative states. it’s an interesting neuroscience problem.

also, I enjoy crying.

(via theatlantic)

longreads   194 12.02.11
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    amazing article. my mom has some zolpidem. it has indeed made her sleep-drive to pick me up from davis islands… that was...
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