Source - http://www.npr.org/
By - ROB STEIN
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By - ROB STEIN
Category - Accommodation In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
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Accommodation In New Orleans |
A burst of brain activity just after the heart stops may be the cause of so-called near-death experiences, scientists say.
The
insight comes from research involving nine lab rats whose brains were
analyzed as they were being euthanized. Researchers discovered what
appears to be a momentary increase in electrical activity in the brain
associated with consciousness.
Although the experiment relied on animals, the results could apply to humans, too, the researchers say.
"Now
science tells us the experiences really could be real for these
individuals, and there is actually biological basis for that," says , of
the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who led the research. "There's
a scientific basis in their brain. It's all really happening in their
brain during this very early period of cardiac arrest."
People
regularly report having powerful experiences when they come close to
dying. They often say they had an overwhelming feeling of peace and
serenity. Frequently they describe being in a dark tunnel with a bright
light at the end. Many report meeting long-lost loved ones.
"Many of them think it's evidence they actually went to heaven — perhaps even spoke with God," Borjigin says.
Borjigin
wanted to find out if there was something happening in the brains of
these people who had close calls with death that could help explain
these experiences.
"If the near-death experience comes from the
brain, there's got to be signs — some measurable activities of the
brain — at the moment of cardiac arrest," she says.
But it's
really hard to study this in people. So Borjigin and her colleagues
decided to study rats. They implanted six electrodes into the brains of
nine rats, gave the animals lethal injections and collected detailed
measurements of brain activity as they died.
"We were just so astonished," Borjigan tells Shots.
Just
after the rats' hearts stopped, there was a burst of brain activity.
Their brain suddenly seemed to go into overdrive, showing all the
hallmarks not only of consciousness but a kind of hyperconsciousness.
"We
found continued and heightened activity," Borjigan says. "Measurable
conscious activity is much, much higher after the heart stops — within
the first 30 seconds."
Borjigin and her colleagues think they
essentially discovered the neurological basis for near-death
experiences. "That really just, just really blew our mind. ... That
really is consistent with what patients report," she says.
Patients report that what they experienced felt more real than reality — so intense that it's often described as life-altering.
But
Borjigan thinks the phenomenon is really just the brain going on
hyperalert to survive while at the same time trying to make sense of all
those neurons firing. It's sort of like a more intense version of
dreaming.
"The near-death experience is perhaps is really the byproduct of the brain's attempt to save itself," she says.
Other scientists praised the research, which is in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"It shows us in considerable more detail than ever done before what happens when the brain is dying," says , a neuroscientist at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle.
"When
you turn off a light switch, the light immediately goes from on to
off," Koch says. "The brain doesn't immediately go off, but it shows a
series of sort of complicated transitions."
But other
scientists are unconvinced. They question how much rat brains can really
tell us about humans. "I don't think that this particular study helps
in any way to explain near-death experiences in human beings," says , who studies dying and near-death experiences at the Stony Brook University School of Medicine in New York.
"We
have no evidence at all that the rats had any near-death experiences or
whether animals can have any such type of experience, first of all,"
Parnia says.
Borjigin and Koch argue that rat brains and human
brains are similar enough to think they probably work in similar ways
when they're dying. But they acknowledge that the new research is just
the first step in trying to understand the neurological basis of
near-death experiences.
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