aspiration pneumonia, cerebral infarction, and diabetes mellitus
AI-generated summary
A 47-year-old man with Type 1 diabetes, previous strokes, acquired brain injury, and epilepsy died from aspiration pneumonia complicated by cerebral infarction. He had chronic aspiration risk due to atonic bowel and had declined PEG feeding or surgical interventions. He was admitted to ICU with aspiration pneumonia, ventilated for 24 hours without improvement, and active intervention was withdrawn. The coroner's finding provides limited detail on clinical management decisions or potential preventability factors. Key clinical lessons relate to the importance of nutritional management in patients with neurological disease at high aspiration risk, and the challenging ethical decisions around life-sustaining treatment in patients with multiple comorbidities who decline preventive interventions.
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