- ►annals.org A Halevy, B Brody - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1993 - Am Coll Physicians Brain death has been discussed extensively for the last 25 years. Most
investigators now believe that requiring death of the entire brain as the
criterion for brain death in the Uniform Determination of Death Act and the ... Cited by 134 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
JL Bernat - The Journal of clinical ethics, 1992 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 1: J Clin Ethics. 1992 Spring;3(1):21-6; discussion 27-8. How much of the brain
must die in brain death? Bernat JL. Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH. ... Cited by 56 - Related articles
JL Bernat, CM Culver, B Gert - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1981 - Am Coll Physicians The permanent cessation of functioning of the organism as a whole is the
definition underlying the traditional understanding of death. We suggest the
total and irreversible loss of functioning of the whole brain as the sole ... Cited by 134 - Related articles - All 5 versions
RD Truog - The Hastings Center Report, 1997 - questia.com Over the past several decades, the concept of brain death has become well
entrenched within the practice of medicine. At a practical level, this concept
has been successful in delineating widely accepted ethical and legal ... Cited by 182 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
SJ Youngner, ET Bartlett - Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983 - Am Coll Physicians Modern technology has raised questions about the definition of death, and
various factors that influence public policy about declaring people dead. The
widely accepted "whole-brain" definition of death is inadequate and should ... Cited by 82 - Related articles - All 4 versions
SJ Youngner, CS Landefeld, CJ Coulton, BW … - Jama, 1989 - Am Med Assoc A sample of 195 physicians and nurses likely to be involved in organ procurement
for transplantation was interviewed about knowledge, personal concepts, and
attitudes concerning "brain death" and organ donation. Only 68 respondents ... Cited by 178 - Related articles - All 3 versions
RM Veatch - The Hastings Center Report, 1993 - questia.com For many years there has been lingering doubt, at least among theorists, that
the currently fashionable "whole-brain-oriented" definition of death has things
exactly right. I myself have long resisted the term "brain death" and will ... Cited by 111 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
DA Shewmon - Neurology, 1998 - AAN Enterprises Methods: Formal diagnosis of BD with survival of 1 week or longer. More than
12,200 sources yielded approximately 175 cases meeting selection criteria; 56
had sufficient information for meta-analysis. Diagnosis was judged reliable ... Cited by 125 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 3 versions
SJ Youngner - Archives of Neurology, 1992 - archneur.highwire.org . . . the Nuer tribe viewed defective newborns as nonhuman "hippopotamuses" who
were mistakenlyborn to human parents and who would be put in the river, which
was viewed as their natural habitat. Does our own society's rapid and ... Cited by 46 - Related articles - All 4 versions