Worries That Sharon Isn't Waking Up
Doctors Differ On Prognosis For Israeli PM In Coma 9 Days After Stroke
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Israeli schoolchildren outside his hospital show an Ariel Sharon photo album that they wanted to present to Sharon, Jan. 11 2006. (GETTY)
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Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert meets with U.S. deputy national security advisor Eliott Abrams in Olmert's office, Jan. 13, 2006. (GETTY)
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Former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres, arriving for a meeting in Tel Aviv, Jan. 13, 2006, says he doesn't want to be prime minister. (AP)
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Interactive Ariel Sharon A look at the life of Israel's 11th prime minister
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Interactive Mideast Conflict Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
Maurizio Miglietta, chief of Trauma and Critical Care at NYU Medical Center, said cerebral bleeding in the wake of Sharon's stroke means that "he's not the average stroke patient." A longer coma is probably to be expected, he said.
"Neurosurgical patients sometimes don't wake up for a week or even two weeks afterwards," Miglietta said. "It's not uncommon."
Doctors have reported only slight improvement in Sharon's condition in the past several days, centering on small movements of limbs in response to pain.
A brain scan on Thursday showed the remnants of blood in his brain have been absorbed, the hospital said. In response, doctors removed a tube they had inserted into his skull to relieve pressure on his brain.
The longer it takes for Sharon to regain consciousness, however, the greater the concern about extensive brain damage.
Sharon's stroke plunged both Israeli politics and Mideast peace prospects into turmoil, as he was seen as the politician best positioned to end Israel's conflict with the Palestinians because of his transformation in recent years from hawk to pragmatist, successfully pulling off Israel's historic withdrawal from the Gaza Strip this summer.
In a sign that Israelis are moving on without Sharon, however, the prime minister's condition was taken off the front pages of several Israeli newspapers on Friday. Television has returned to normal programming, and Israelis were glued to their sets Thursday evening, watching an Israeli basketball team trounce a team from Croatia.
Last week, Israel's popular TV comedy, "A Wonderful Country," canceled programming because of Sharon's stroke. On Friday, back on schedule, the show poked fun at reporters trying to create drama in the absence of developments, and at the hospital's director, Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef, who has delivered near-daily updates on Sharon's condition in monotone.
On the political front, Acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met with two U.S. envoys on Friday to discuss Jan. 25 Palestinian parliamentary elections, which have stirred wide concern because of Hamas militants' participation in them. The envoys later met with Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.
Israel Radio cited envoy David Welch as saying after the meeting with Abbas that the U.S. thinks Palestinians should be allowed to vote for parliament wherever they are. Abbas demanded that Israel remove roadblocks and allow free passage of voters and candidates, radio reported.
Also Friday, Israel Radio reported that Olmert would appoint the popular justice minister, Tzipi Livni, as the new foreign minister, which would make her the most senior woman in the government.
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