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Gabrielle Giffords' Family Weighs Best Course For Rehabilitation

Gabrielle Giffords Recovery

SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN and MARILYNN MARCHIONE   01/19/11 07:52 PM ET   AP

TUCSON, Ariz. — Less than two weeks after surviving a bullet through the brain, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords stood up and looked out the window of her hospital room Wednesday as she prepares to move to Houston to begin an arduous journey of intensive mental and physical rehabilitation.

Hospital spokeswoman Janet Stark said Giffords was able to stand on her feet with assistance from medical staff Wednesday in another significant milestone in her recovery.

The next step is extensive rehabilitation in which she will have to relearn how to think and plan. It's unclear if she is able to speak or how well she can see. And while she is moving both arms and legs, it's uncertain how much strength she has on her right side.

Her swift transition from an intensive care unit to a rehab center is based on the latest research, which shows the sooner rehab starts, the better patients recover.

Giffords' family hopes to move the Arizona congresswoman on Friday to TIRR Memorial Hermann hospital in Houston, where her husband lives and works as an astronaut. The exact day of the move will depend on her health.

"I am extremely hopeful at the signs of recovery that my wife has made since the shooting," Mark Kelly said in a statement released by Giffords' congressional office. The staff at University Medical Center in Tucson "has stabilized her to the point of being ready to move to the rehabilitation phase."

Dr. John Holcomb, retired Army colonel and a trauma surgeon at the Houston hospital, praised the care she received in Tucson and said Giffords would "move quickly toward a tailored and comprehensive rehab plan."

Giffords was shot in the forehead Jan. 8 while meeting with constituents outside a grocery store in Tucson. She remains in serious condition. Her recovery has amazed her family and impressed her doctors, who say she is improving every day.

Over the weekend, Giffords was weaned off the ventilator and had her breathing tube replaced with a tracheotomy tube in her windpipe. Doctors also inserted a feeding tube to boost her calorie intake and repaired her right eye socket, which was damaged by the bullet.

Since being taken off sedation, Giffords has been alert and opening her eyes more often. She also started rigorous physical therapy, dangling her legs over her bedside to exercise her muscles and sitting in a chair for periods at a time. Kelly told ABC in an interview that she gave him a neck rub.

Still, the extent of her injuries and long-term prognosis won't be known for some time.

The gunman shot 18 other people, killing six and wounding 12. All survivors have been released from hospitals, and doctors say the hospital is now no longer the best place for Giffords.

"When she's medically stable, there's really no reason to keep her there," where she could get infections and other complications long known to plague patients with long hospital stays, said Dr. Steve Williams, rehab chief at Boston Medical Center and the Boston University School of Medicine.

"Over the last five to 10 years, there has been a big push to getting patients rapidly to rehab," because research shows they recover faster and better the earlier therapy starts, he said.

Giffords will likely be moved to Houston by Medevac jet, Williams said, and there is little risk of a brain injury from flying. Since part of her skull has been removed, there is less pressure on the brain, and there has been no problem with swelling during her recovery. During rehab, she will probably wear a helmet.

Once she arrives in Houston, doctors will do a complete assessment of what Giffords can and cannot do, said Dr. Reid Thompson, neurosurgery chief at Vanderbilt University in Nashville.

"The rehab is going to be pretty intense for her, both cognitively and physically," because she'll need to recover frontal lobe functions, Thompson said. "She's going to have to relearn how to think, plan, organize."

A penetrating brain injury like a bullet wound leaves a specific path of damage. Giffords' wound path appears to be below the motor cortex, which controls movement, but may include an area controlling speech, Williams said.

He is not involved in Giffords' care and based his comments on diagrams and reports of her injury that have been made public so far.

"One of the questions is whether she'll be able to speak," Williams said. Giffords has a breathing tube now, and even if this impedes her speech, she might be able to mouth words.

"That would be a good indication that she at least is able to express herself," Williams said.

"The cognitive ability and the speech are the key things," he said. "We know that she's moving her limbs. The question is, how strong is she."

Giffords' family considered rehab centers in Washington, New York, Chicago and Houston, doctors said. The Houston one "has a national reputation for treating serious penetrating brain injuries and is also in a community where I have family and a strong support network," Kelly's statement said.

He is scheduled to command NASA's last space shuttle flight in April, but that's uncertain now.

TIRR Memorial Hermann is a 116-bed rehab facility that is part of the Texas Medical Center in Houston. TIRR, which stands for The Institute for Research and Rehabilitation, claims to have the largest research program on recovery from traumatic brain injury in the world, and gets federal funding for long-term study of such patients.

One of its success stories is Buffalo Bills' tight end Kevin Everett, treated after a life-threatening spinal cord injury in 2007. Everett was paralyzed from the neck down when he arrived at the rehab center in September 2007; now he can walk.

Remarkably, Giffords may not spend much time at TIRR. She will probably spend just five to eight weeks at the rehab center, then continue getting therapy as an outpatient, Williams said.

"Her early recovery is very promising," and bodes well for further improvement, he said.

___

Online:

Houston rehab center: http://tinyurl.com/deyasw

Centers for Disease Control:

http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/factsheets/tbi.htm

National Institutes of Health:

http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/tbi/detail_tbi.htm

__

Medical Writer Marilynn Marchione reported from Milwaukee.

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TUCSON, Ariz. — Less than two weeks after surviving a bullet through the brain, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords stood up and looked out the window of her hospital room Wednesday as she prepares to move ...
TUCSON, Ariz. — Less than two weeks after surviving a bullet through the brain, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords stood up and looked out the window of her hospital room Wednesday as she prepares to move ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Windpiper
Just tell the truth!
01:59 PM on 01/24/2011
She couldn't be as brain dead as most of the looney Repub's!
09:50 PM on 01/22/2011
My prayer is that Gabby recovers and that her case be a model for the kind of care every American should have access to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
euthman
09:34 AM on 01/20/2011
I think it's great that Representative Giffords is going to get the best rehab and long-term care available, all at taxpayer expense (with any coverage "gap" to be comped by Memorial Hermann Healthcare Systems). After all, she's a bona fide hero, tragically cut down while simply doing her job. It's not like she is some mere convenience store clerk who got shot while behind the cash register. I mean, she _really_ deserves the best. And we all need to do our part to make sure it happens!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tiggy
08:11 AM on 01/20/2011
I hope that she continues to progress and soon returns to her regular life. I would like to say, that I also hope that one day, every person having a brain injury, whether by bullet, fall, car accident or any other injury will have access to the necessary and needed Health Care facilities. Most insurance carriers confine one to the state in which they are insured.
12:28 AM on 01/20/2011
This is amazing news. I hope wherever she ends up getting her rehabilitation, she makes a speedy and complete recovery.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jizello
Thought as you look like Yoda-you were also wise
10:51 PM on 01/19/2011
Wow this is a true miracle. Go Gabby! Whole country is rooting for you!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yardarm
Bay of Pigs, Vietnam
09:22 PM on 01/19/2011
Gabby. i pray for your recovery. i am encouraged by your ability to stand so soon after surgery. This is indeed a good sign.
Your rehab may or may not be easy, but hang in there. i too had some brain surgery that was traumatic. Learning how to walk, talk, and feed myself was frustrating but i got it done. So can you.
Nothing will ever be the same but you can get close. Hang in and never give up. It will come.
08:51 PM on 01/19/2011
It seems that she has not lost some of her most important character traits - courage and committment to trying to do her best. She, and all the people helping her, are models for dealing with tramatic tragedies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wilinot
08:48 PM on 01/19/2011
I hope she just keeps on getting better.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KikoJones
08:29 PM on 01/19/2011
Wonderful news! Godspeed, Rep. Giffords.
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08:27 PM on 01/19/2011
Go Gabby Go.....I pray for a complete recovery for you. Praying for all the victims of this mad man. Not a day has gone by that I don't think of Christina's parents and pray for them and worry about how much pain they are in.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill O Smiley
07:36 PM on 01/19/2011
Yeah I was just outside of where I work (in the Texas Medical Center) and saw all these camera crews from every local news station and wondered what was going on. That must have been it. She is in the best hands for sure!
07:30 PM on 01/19/2011
She's a good looking lady, isn't she? I can see a biopic in the future, Gabby played by Hillary Swank, maybe Bruce Willis as her husband?
KennebunkportIndependent
Back in my day, we had NINE planets.
07:13 PM on 01/19/2011
Things look good. I hope he has the chance to fly his last mission on the space shuttle, should he want to (even as other than flight commander).
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
justlw
Nehemiah Scudder 2012: Now More Than Ever
07:05 PM on 01/19/2011
I hate to read too much into all of this, but the progress she has made seems phenomenal. Best wishes to her and the others hurt in this going forward, and my condolences to the loved ones of those who did not make it.