'Hibernating'
Man Survives for 3 Weeks
By
HIROKO TABUCHI
TOKYO
- A man who went missing in western Japan survived in near-freezing weather without
food and water for over three weeks by falling into a state similar to hibernation,
doctors said.
Mitsutaka
Uchikoshi had almost no pulse, his organs had all but shut down and his body temperature
was 71 degrees Fahrenheit when he was discovered on Rokko mountain in late October,
said doctors who treated him at the nearby Kobe City General Hospital. He had
been missing for 24 days.
"On
the second day, the sun was out, I was in a field, and I felt very comfortable.
That's my last memory," Uchikoshi, 35, told reporters Tuesday before returning
home from hospital. "I must have fallen asleep after that."
Doctors
believe Uchikoshi, a city official from neighboring Nishinomiya who was visiting
the mountain for a barbecue party, tripped and later lost consciousness in a remote
mountainous area.
His
body temperature soon plunged as he lay in 50-degree weather, greatly slowing
down his metabolism.
"(Uchikoshi)
fell into a state similar to hibernation and many of his organs slowed, but his
brain was protected," said Dr. Shinichi Sato, head of the hospital's emergency
unit. "I believe his brain capacity has recovered 100 percent."
Uchikoshi
was treated for severe hypothermia, multiple organ failure and blood loss from
his fall, but was unlikely to experience any lasting ill effects, Sato said.
Doctors
were still uncertain how exactly Uchikoshi survived for weeks with his metabolism
almost at a standstill.
In
animals like squirrels or bears, hibernation reduces the amount of oxygen that
cells need to survive, protecting them from damage to the brain and other organs.