What they said.
It's a nice story and all, but they performed CPR for 3 hours? REALLY? Is that even physically possible?
Three hours is an extremely long time to have no oxygen going to the brain. I would like to believe this story, and if it gives people hope that there is something out there, all the better, but it sounds fishy.
I was CPR certified in high school. We had to practice on dummies and part of the class I was in (first aid, aside from the certification) was to preform CPR on a dummy for "as long as we could," and after about 10-20 minutes of CPR, your arms are ready to fall off. They would have had to be switching people every ten minutes or so, and I can't imagine a hospital doing that. I mean, even EMTs and doctors stop eventually.
I just did some reading about cerebral hypoxia (loss of oxygen to the brain) and apparently first the brain cells die, then due to increased acidity in the brain, oxidants and free radicals appear. The best I can figure out, this causes the brain tissue to die in large areas. The same way loss of blood to a limb causes the limb to die. Apparently the stagnant blood in the brain (lack of oxygen) is the same as no blood at all. The only proven therapy to correct this is used in NICU units on infants who were deprived oxygen in childbirth (one of the causes of cerebral palsy), and it includes induced hypothermia. I don't know if it would work on someone much older (and larger) than an infant though. I've not come across anything while I was writing this post that said that this is used for anyone but infants.
From everything I've read, this child should experience very extreme brain damage. I'm sure there will be more to hear about this case.
Also, apparently coma patients experience lack of oxygen to the brain, so they are put on respirators, so even if he wasn't dead and just comatose, he's still likely to have suffered brain damage.
I honestly wonder if this is true, or right up there with a woman giving birth to alien baby stories.