| Doctors say Sharon out of immediate danger(AP)
 Updated: 2006-01-11 08:34
 Dr. Anthony Rudd, a stroke specialist at St. Thomas' Hospital in London, said 
giving blood thinners to a person suffering from the brain disease "certainly 
wouldn't be standard procedure," but it was a judgment call and indicated his 
doctors believed the hole in his heart was more of a risk than a brain 
hemorrhage. 
 "I'm sure that the decisions they made were made in good faith based on the 
information they had," he said. 
 On Monday, doctors began decreasing the sedatives that have kept Sharon in a 
coma, and he started breathing on his own and moved his right arm and leg 
slightly in response to stimulation. On Tuesday, he increased his movement on 
the right side and also moved his left arm in response to stimulation, said Dr. 
Shlomo Mor-Yosef, the director of Hadassah Hospital. 
 Movement on Sharon's left side could be significant because that part of the 
body is controlled by the right side of the brain, where Sharon's stroke 
occurred. 
 Rudd called the news "surprising." 
 
 
 
 "It's certainly better than what I 
would have predicted so far. Based on the fact that he had a large hemorrhage in 
the right side of the brain, I would have predicted advanced paralysis," he 
said.
 |  Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon peers 
 through his glasses during a press conference in January 2005. 
 [AFP/file]
 |  Sharon's sons were playing Mozart as well as one of his favorite Israeli 
songs, "The King's Bride," by folk singer Rivka Zohar, in his hospital room in 
hopes it would elicit a further response. 
 Sharon remained in critical but stable condition and had a decent chance of 
surviving, Weiss said. "Metaphorically speaking, we have backed off five yards 
from the edge of the cliff," he said. 
 Over the next 24 hours, the doctors will continue decreasing Sharon's 
sedatives and conducting tests to further assess his brain functions. A final 
assessment would have to wait until the sedatives completely wear off, possibly 
several days, said Weiss, the anesthesiologist. 
 "There is improvement, but we still can't know the extent of the cognitive 
improvement," Weiss said. "We simply need patience." 
 A final medical analysis of Sharon's long-term prognosis would end 
uncertainty over the fate of the prime minister, heralded by many as the best 
hope for Mideast peace. Doctors were doubtful he would recover enough to resume 
his duties. 
 Olmert has worked hard to portray an aura of stability. His first major test 
is resolving the dispute over whether to allow Palestinians to vote in Jerusalem 
during Jan. 25 parliamentary elections. 
 Olmert's office said the Cabinet would decide Sunday whether to let the 
city's Arab residents cast absentee ballots in post offices provided no 
candidates from the militant Hamas group were on the ballot. 
 The campaign for Israel's March 28 elections has been largely frozen since 
Sharon's stroke. An assessment of Sharon's condition could enable his new Kadima 
Party to select a successor and start campaigning. Olmert is seen as the most 
likely heir. 
 
 
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