Now his family members call T. Scott Marr — once nearly brain-dead — the “miracle man.”
Marr originally was diagnosed with a stroke on Dec. 12 after he was found lying in his bed, unresponsive but breathing. He was rushed to Methodist Hospital and soon placed on a breathing machine in intensive care.
Marr showed no neurological improvement by the time his family returned the following day. Brain swelling — primarily in the back of the brain — concerned his doctors.
“We were worried in this case that this was not a reversible process and that it was going to proceed to brain death,” said Dr. Rebecca Runge.
His daughter Preston Marr said she and the rest of the family faced a harsh reality: Scott Marr was not expected to recover.
“He had always said, ‘I never want you guys to see me lying in a hospital bed, lying in a nursing home,'” Preston Marr said.
“They told us he was on his way to brain death, so we said our goodbyes before extubating him, all the monitors were shut off and we waited by his side,” she said.
He kept breathing. He was still breathing on his own the next morning when his children returned after skipping their appointment with a funeral home.
“I asked him to move his thumbs, and he slowly moved his thumbs, and I asked him to wiggle his toes, and he wiggled all his toes really slightly,” Preston Marr said.
His doctors soon ordered another test. It showed that Scott Marr was suffering from a rare condition called posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome.
“It’s commonly caused by high blood pressure, but there are many things that can cause it,” Dr. Runge said. The severe swelling Marr experienced is not typical of the syndrome, she said, which is why a devastating stroke was the initial diagnosis.
Marr credits his faith for his survival.
I don’t want to make this into a huge religious thing but I’ll tell you what: It was pretty much a miracle,” he said.