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'We're only asking for some time': Lethbridge family battles to keep mother on life support

A family in Lethbridge is fighting to keep their elderly mother on a ventilator but say time is running out before doctors remove her from life support.

Darlene Crayne, 71, has been in a medically induced coma since suffering heart attack Aug. 26

Miranda Holowka is fighting to keep her mother, Darlene Crayne, 71, on a ventilator at Chinook Regional Hospital in Lethbridge. (Colleen Underwood/CBC)

A family in Lethbridge, Alta., is fighting to keep their elderly mother on a ventilator but say time is running out before doctors remove her from life support.

Darlene Crayne, 71, has been in a medically induced coma at Chinook Regional Hospital in Lethbridge since suffering a heart attack Aug. 26 while visiting family in Calgary.

"We're only asking for some time," daughter Miranda Holowka told CBC News. "We're not asking for a forever situation. We just want to observe her, see how she's doing without all these medications and then move on from there."

Craynewas riding in a car with her son, grandson and son's girlfriend when she became short of breath then fell unconscious.

They stopped at a fire hall and firefighters were able to revive Crayne before she was rushed to hospital by ambulance where she was put into themedically induced coma and placed on aventilator.

The medical team that's been taking care of the mother of seven saidshe has only "minimal brain function" and a meaningful recovery is highly unlikely.

Darlene Crayne has been in a medically induced coma at Chinook Regional Hospital in Lethbridge since suffering a heart attack on Aug. 26. (Colleen Underwood/CBC)

The hospital planed to remove Crane's ventilator Wednesday at noon, but her family was granted an extention Tuesday that gives them until the end of the week to get a court injunction.

Holowka saidthey've hired a lawyer.

"When I'm there, she's quite calm, she'll open her eyes," she said. "I do believe she is aware of her surroundings."

Alberta Health Services declined to comment.

Calgary bioethicist Dr. Ian Mitchell said families can legally challenge these sorts of medical decisions, but they need to have facts to put before the court.

"They will want another medical opinion saying someone with these EEGs, CTs, these MRIs, these findings on physical examination, is likely to recover," he said.

With files from Colleen Underwood and Silvana Benolich