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Indiana governor in critical condition after brain surgery

Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon
Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon

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FRANK O'BANNON
AGE -- 73; born January 30, 1930.

RESIDENCE -- Indianapolis.

EDUCATION -- Bachelor's degree, Indiana University, 1952; law
degree, Indiana University, 1957.

CAREER -- Attorney, private practice; state Senate, 1971-1989;
lieutenant governor, 1989 -1997; became governor, 1997.  Also
chairman of the board, O'Bannon Publishing Co., which publishes
weekly newspapers in Harrison and Crawford counties.

FAMILY -- Wife, Judy; three children.
Source: AP
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Friends and family are hoping that Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon recovers after undergoing brain surgery following a stroke. WISH's Mary McDermott reports (September 9)
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CHICAGO, Illinois (CNN) -- Indiana Gov. Frank O'Bannon remained in critical condition at a Chicago hospital early Tuesday after undergoing emergency brain surgery, a hospital spokeswoman said.

Sherilyn Jadish said there had been "no change" in the governor's condition.

"At the present time, he cannot ... function as governor," Dr. Wesley Yapor said Monday after a three-hour operation on O'Bannon at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Doctors removed blood from both sides of O'Bannon's brain. Brain scans showed "the most likely cause" of the problem was a stroke, Yapor said.

O'Bannon, 73, was in a drug-induced coma and on a ventilator after the surgery. Asked if the governor would recover, Yapor told reporters, "I think that the next 24 to 48 hours will be crucial to be able to answer that question."

"We don't know if he is permanently disabled," but "without surgery he would not have survived," said Yapor, who headed the neurosurgical team that performed the operation.

About 9 a.m. Monday an aide to the governor attempted to reach O'Bannon by phone and then by knocking on the door of his room at the Palmer House Hilton Hotel.

When he got no answer, the aide summoned a hotel security guard, who opened the door and found O'Bannon on the floor of a closet -- unconscious but breathing, said Dr. Patrick Connor, who was working in the emergency room where paramedics took O'Bannon a few minutes later.

Within two hours, O'Bannon was in surgery, Connor said.

Critical to his ability to recover is the amount of time that blood from a broken blood vessel filled his skull, putting pressure on the brain's delicate tissues. Doctors said they were heartened that in O'Bannon's case it may have been no more than a few hours.

"The recovery is really in terms of weeks and months and not hours and days. That puts us in a very difficult situation trying to predict what the future holds. A lot of things can happen, both good and bad," said Dr. Hunt Batjer, chief of neurosurgery at Northwestern.

"We see some amazing recoveries from people that you would not expect to do so, and we see the opposite. It's just to soon to call on this one."

In Indianapolis, O'Bannon's press secretary Mary Dieter said the staffs of the governor and Lt. Gov. Joe Kernan were researching transfer of power.

The state constitution provides for the speaker of the house and the president pro tem of the senate to send a statement to the Supreme Court stating that the governor is not able to carry out his duties, she said.

The Supreme Court then has 48 hours to determine whether that is true. If so, the governor's powers would devolve to Kernan, Dieter said.

A Democrat, O'Bannon recently underwent his annual physical, she said. "The doctor pronounced him not only with a clean bill of health, but said he wished he were as healthy."

O'Bannon's wife, Judy, and one of his adult daughters were at the hospital after being taken from the family's home in southern Indiana by helicopter to Chicago's Midway Airport. A number of the governor's staff members were also at the hospital, Sullivan said.

O'Bannon had been in Chicago since Sunday with Kernan to attend the Midwest U.S.-Japan Conference, said Andrew Stoner, his deputy press secretary.

The meeting of CEOs from more than 200 companies is held to foster trade and cooperation between U.S. and Japanese executives. It began Monday and is to end Tuesday.

The two-term governor served from 1989 to 1996 as lieutenant governor under Evan Bayh, now a U.S. senator, after 18 years as a state senator from Corydon, representing all or part of eight southern Indiana counties, the biography on his Web site said.

During his early years as a lawyer, O'Bannon also worked at the family-owned newspaper, The Corydon Democrat, shooting pictures, covering general news, writing sports stories and stuffing the paper's sections together. O'Bannon wrote the newspaper's editorial about President Kennedy's assassination.


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