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HomeUSDiscover the Chilling Final Words: What Science Reveals About Post-Mortem Experiences

Discover the Chilling Final Words: What Science Reveals About Post-Mortem Experiences

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The last words a person hears before passing might be the most distressing, as an eminent critical care physician has uncovered that the brain remains active even after the heart ceases to beat.

Dr. Sam Parnia explained that in the moments following the cessation of CPR, the deceased are likely still able to hear doctors pronouncing their time of death until consciousness fully dissipates.

As the director of critical care and resuscitation research at NYU Langone School of Medicine in New York, Parnia has delved into the brain’s activities at the time of death and has interviewed patients who have had near-death experiences.

His findings include numerous instances where individuals, clinically dead because their hearts had stopped, were revived and later recounted conversations and events from the room with startling accuracy.

Physicians focus on the heart when declaring time of death because that marks the point when blood stops flowing to the brain.

However, a study led by Parnia in 2023 discovered spikes in brain waves associated with higher cognitive function up to an hour into CPR.

This means the brain can ‘wake up’ and start working again, in a way that looks a lot like normal thinking and awareness, even while doctors are still performing CPR on a stopped heart.

Unique brain patterns examined on electroencephalograms (EEGs) during near-death experiences appeared to provide evidence that patients were really in a dream-like consciousness that left them aware enough to keep hearing people speak.

Dr Sam Parnia at NYU hospital has said the final words a person is likely to hear is their own time of death being announced (Stock Image)

Dr Sam Parnia at NYU hospital has said the final words a person is likely to hear is their own time of death being announced (Stock Image)

‘Although doctors have long thought that the brain suffers permanent damage about 10 minutes after the heart stops supplying it with oxygen, our work found that the brain can show signs of electrical recovery long into ongoing CPR,’ Parnia said in a statement.

Parnia’s study, called AWARE-II, specifically looked into what happens to people’s brains and minds during cardiac arrest at 25 hospitals across the US and UK.

Researchers monitored patients in real time with EEGs to track electrical activity, measuring oxygen levels in the brain, and interviewing survivors about what they remembered while being declared clinically dead.

From 2017 to 2020, the team examined 567 people who had in-hospital cardiac arrests and received CPR to try to bring them back from the dead.

Those observations revealed one in five survivors reported clear, dream-like experiences during their death, such as feeling detached from their body, seeing events in the room, or having memories of their entire life flash in front of them.

Moreover, the study in the journal Resuscitation uncovered spikes in brain waves, including gamma, alpha, and beta waves, which are linked to thinking, memory, and awareness, showing up 35 to 60 minutes after a person’s heart stopped.

Once blood stopped flowing to the brain, Parnia found the brain cells lose oxygen quickly, but instead of going completely quiet, they can fire off strong signals and connect in new ways for a short time.

This burst of brain activity is thought to trigger a hyper-alert state, like a super-focused mode, which might explain why some people keep hearing the world around them even as the rest of their body has shut down. 

Dr Sam Parnia (Pictured) conducted a study in 2023 that found brain activity long after the heart stops beating, known as clinical death

Dr Sam Parnia (Pictured) conducted a study in 2023 that found brain activity long after the heart stops beating, known as clinical death

Along with still being ‘alive’ in the real world and able to hear the doctor’s terrifying comments, Parnia previously explained how this energy burst in the brain also allows people to access everything in their mind all at one time. 

‘As the brain shuts down, because of a lack of blood flow in death, the normal braking systems in the brain are removed, known as disinhibition,’ Parnia explained in 2023.

‘This enables people to have access to their entire consciousness. All their thoughts, memories, all their emotional states, everything that they’ve ever done, which they relive through the perspective of morality and ethics.’

Overall, Parnia explained that the revelation of people continuing to live beyond the traditional point of death opens up new areas of study for patient care, helping doctors design new ways to restart the heart or prevent brain injuries during cardiac arrest.

For example, better techniques or medicines could protect the brain while CPR is happening.

The findings may also impact organ donation, as understanding how long the brain really stays alive may affect decisions about harvesting organs too soon. 

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