“Some Patients Who ‘Died’ but Survived, Report Lucid ‘Near-Death Experiences,’ 
a New Study Shows”

What happens when we actually die—when our heart stops and all electrical 
activity “flatlines” in our brains?

By Rachel Nuwer  Sep 14, 2023   
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/some-patients-who-died-but-survived-report-lucid-near-death-experiences-a-new-study-shows/


... Scientists are making strides in better understanding the brain’s process 
of transitioning from life to death.

Most recently, this has become possible because of research that has monitored 
the brains of people who have been in the throes of actually dying. Some of 
these individuals have been able to report back about what they experienced.

According to findings published on September 14 in Resuscitation, the flatlined 
brains of some cardiac arrest patients burst into a flurry of activity during 
CPR, even though their heart stopped beating up to an hour.

A small subset of study participants who survived were able to recall the 
experience, and one person was able to identify an audio stimulus that was 
played while doctors were trying to resuscitate them.

The researchers interpret the brain recordings they made of these patients as 
markers of “lucid, recalled experiences of death”—an observation that has 
“never been possible before,” says lead author Sam Parnia, an associate 
professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health and a longtime researcher of what 
happens to people as they die.

“We’ve also been able to put forward a coherent, mechanistic explanation for 
why this occurs.”

“Recalled experiences of death”—a term Parnia prefers over “near-death 
experiences” for accuracy—have been reported across diverse cultures throughout 
recorded history.

Some Western scientists previously dismissed such stories as hallucinations or 
dreams, but recently a few research teams have begun to pay more serious 
attention to the phenomena as a means to investigate consciousness and shine 
light on the mysteries of death.

In the new study, Parnia and his colleagues sought to find a biological 
signature of recalled experiences of death. They teamed up with 25 hospitals, 
primarily in the U.S. and the U.K.

Medical personnel used portable devices that could be placed on the heads of 
patients who were having a cardiac emergency to measure their brain oxygen 
levels and electrical activity without interfering with their medical treatment.

The researchers also tested for conscious and unconscious perceptions by 
placing headphones on patients that played a repeated recording of the names of 
three fruits: banana, pear and apple. In terms of unconscious learning, a 
person who does not remember hearing these fruit names but is asked to 
“randomly think of three fruits” may still give the right answer, Parnia says.

Past research has shown, for example, that even people in a deep coma can 
unconsciously learn the names of fruits or cities if those words are whispered 
in their ear.

Between May 2017 and March 2020, 567 people suffered cardiac arrests at 
participating hospitals. Medical staff managed to gather usable brain oxygen 
and activity data from 53 of these patients, most of whom showed an electrical 
flatline state on electroencephalographic (EEG) brain monitors.

But about 40 percent then experienced electrical activity that re-emerged at 
some point with normal to near-normal brain waves that were consistent with 
consciousness.

This activity was sometimes restored up to 60 minutes into CPR.

Of the 567 total patients, just 53 survived. The researchers conducted 
interviews with 28 of the survivors. They also interviewed 126 people from the 
community who had gone through cardiac arrests because the sample size of 
survivors from the new study was so small.

Nearly 40 percent reported some perceived awareness of the event without 
specific memories attached, and 20 percent seemed to have had a recalled death 
experience.

Many in the latter group described the event as a “moral evaluation” of “their 
entire life and how they’ve conducted themselves,” Parnia says.

In their interviews with survivors, the researchers found that just one person 
was able to recall the names of fruits that had been played while they received 
CPR. Parnia acknowledges that this individual could have guessed the correct 
fruits by chance.

He and his colleagues have developed a working hypothesis to explain their 
findings.

Normally, the brain has “braking systems” in place that filter most elements of 
brain function out of our experience of consciousness. This enables people to 
efficiently operate in the world, because under regular circumstances, “you 
couldn’t function with access to your whole brain’s activity being in the realm 
of consciousness,” he says.

In the dying brain, however, the researchers hypothesize that the braking 
system is removed.

Parts that are normally dormant become active, and the dying person gains 
access to their entire consciousness—“all your thoughts, all your memories, 
everything that’s been stored before,” Parnia says.

“We don’t know the evolutionary benefit of this, but it seems to prepare people 
for their transition from life into death.”

The findings also raise questions about the brain’s resiliency to oxygen 
deprivation. It could be, Parnia says, that some people who have conventionally 
been thought to be beyond the point of saving could in fact be revived.

“The traditional thinking among doctors is that the brain, once deprived of 
oxygen for five to 10 minutes, dies,” he says.

“We were able to show that the brain is quite robust in terms of its ability to 
resist oxygen deprivation for prolonged periods of time, which opens up new 
pathways for finding treatments for brain damage in the future.”

The new study “represents a Herculean effort to understand as objectively as 
possible the nature of brain function as it may apply to consciousness and 
near-death experiences during cardiac arrest,” says Lakhmir Chawla, an 
intensive care unit physician at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in San 
Diego, Calif., who has published papers on spikes of EEG activity at the time 
of death in patients.

While the results Parnia and his colleagues report are “striking” from a 
scientific point of view, “I believe that we should allow these data to also 
inform our humanity,” he adds.

For one, the findings should “compel clinicians to treat patients who are 
receiving CPR as if they are awake,” which is something “we rarely do.”

And for those individuals who do seem to be beyond saving, Chawla says, doctors 
could invite their families in to come say goodbye, “as the patient may still 
be able to hear them.”

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