Mind

Human Brain Continues to Function After Death, Study Finds

It may seem like it’s impossible to know what happens to human brain function after we die, but luckily, there is one way we can find out. Doctors have long been studying the phenomenon of near-death experiences to find out what happens to our brains when we’re close to dying. It’s taken years of examination to discover hard evidence for what could happen. Many people who have an NDE claim that they see their loved ones ready to greet them, or a light at the end of the tunnel guiding them towards their fate. But what is happening to the brain during our final moments, and even after death?

Our bodies die, but our brains live on

This is where things get a little crazy. Despite our bodies being completely inactive, it’s thought that the human brain still has consciousness after death and does still function. A piece of research carried out at NYU Langone School of Medicine studied those who had suffered cardiac arrest, but survived, even after technically dying and then being resuscitated.

The research is calling for the meaning of death to be refined to when the heart stops. That is the point at which our other functions begin to fail too, including brain activity. However, there is evidence gleaned from this study that suggests our brains have a burst of energy delivered just before death. It allowed their minds to remain active, and participants were able to remember things such as conversations between the doctors, even though technically, they were dead.

The evidence doesn’t end there. Another study was carried out at a Canadian intensive care unit, where four terminal patients were removed from their life support machines. Despite one of the patients being declared dead, they persisted to show signs of brain activity for a further ten minutes afterward. There were no physical signs of life, with unresponsive pupils and no pulse to speak of, the patient’s brain was still producing brain waves – the same sort built during a period of profound sleep.

Dying is a pleasant experience

According to Dr. Parnia and other near-death experience studies, dying naturally is not painful or scary, but rather, an enjoyable experience. His studies have found that people who have a near-death experience often feel a warm, welcoming light, inviting them to go into death peacefully. The studies he did commonly observe that the participant was so comfortable in the experience, that they usually didn’t want to come back to life.

What is the next step?

After the feelings of peace pass, this is often the moment where people experience other symptoms commonly linked to death. Much of Dr. Parnia’s findings match the standard clichés of NDEs, where people see their deceased families, or a bright light, or even review their lives as a whole. Nothing about the experience tends to feel scary.

While skeptics claim that these experiences could be hallucinations, Dr. Parnia says that isn’t possible – participants were able to recall entire conversations the doctors had had, even after they were pronounced as dead. Their brains were still active, so they were able to hear things they would never have been able to otherwise.

But what does all of this mean?

For the participants of these studies, the experiences were often very positive for them, and it encouraged them to be more positive with their new lives after the NDE. They began to lead a more selfless life and took their second chance at life with both hands. But what do these studies indicate about life after death?

It’s still challenging to know what comes next. The people who came back to tell their story did die technically, but we don’t know what happens after the symptoms the survivors reported – do they go into the bright light? Is there something on the other side? It’s possibly a question we’ll never have the answer to, but the research into NDEs gets us closer to knowing every day.

 

Hayley Anderton

Hayley Anderton is a Creative Writing graduate from Liverpool. She’s a freelance writer and the self-published novelist of the LGBT YA book, Double Bluff. She doesn’t go anywhere without a notepad and has been writing ever since she can remember. Her other interests include baking, talking about politics and feminism, and snuggling up with her cat. She has dreams of traveling the world with her best friends, and of being a well-known author someday.

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