Decoding The Mystery Of Near-Death Experiences - an electric toothbrush

by:Yovog     2022-06-30
Decoding The Mystery Of Near-Death Experiences  -  an electric toothbrush
We 've all heard stories about the neighborhood.
Death Experience: Tunnel, white light, encounter with long dragon
The dead relatives now look very alive.
Scientists are skeptical about these claims.
They say these feelings and vision are only the result of brain closure.
But now some researchers are looking at the nervous system.
Death experience and questioning: Can your brain function when the brain stops?
"I came out of my head," Pam Reynolds met her on her tour bus.
She's a big man in music.
Her company southern tracks recorded the music of everyone from Bruce Springsteen to Pearl Jam to REM.
But you probably never heard her favorite song.
This is the article Reynolds wrote about her traveling to and from the gate of death.
This experience made her a rock star nearby. death world.
Believers say she proves that the brain works when it stops working.
People who don't believe it say she's not that kind of person.
Renault's journey begins on a hot August in 1991.
"I was at Virginia Beach.
"I'm with my husband," she recalls . "
"We are promoting a new record.
I forgot how to talk inexplicably.
I have a big mouth.
I will never forget how to speak.
An MRI showed that her brain cadre had an aneurysm.
A time bomb has leaked.
Her doctor in Atlanta said her biggest hope was a young brain surgeon named Robert spitzler at the Barrow Institute of Neurology in Arizona.
"The aneurysm is very large, which means that the risk of rupture is also very high," Spetzler said . ".
"It's a place to really give her the best chance to fix it, what we call a" cardiac arrest ".
"It was a bold operation: to cool her body, to drain blood from the head like oil on the car's engine, to cut the aneurysm, and then bring her back from the edge of death.
"She's as desperate as you are and still alive," Spetzler observed . ".
At the beginning of the operation, the surgeon closed Renault's eyes with tape and put the molded speaker in her ear.
The clicking sound from the ear speaker is as loud as the sound from the jet when it takes off, it allows the surgeon to measure her brain stem activity and let them know when it is possible to discharge her
"When I started to hear the noise, I was lying on gurney to take care of my business and was in a serious coma," Reynolds recalls . ".
"It's a natural D, and as the sound continues --
I don't know how to explain this except to go ahead and say --
My head popped up.
"A tunnel and bright lights, she said she found herself looking down at the operating table.
She said she could see 20 people around the table and hear the dentist's drill.
She looked at the instruments in the hands of the surgeon.
"It was an odd-
"It looks good," she said.
"It looks like the handle on my electric toothbrush.
Reynolds observed that the Medas Rex bones saw that the surgeon used to cut her head, drill bit and case frequently, which looked like the one her father kept the socket wrench.
Then she noticed a surgeon in her left groin.
"I heard a woman say her artery is too small. ' And Dr. Spetzler —
I think it's him.
"Use the other side," Reynolds said . ".
Soon after, the surgeon began to reduce her body temperature to 60 degrees.
At about that time, Reynolds thought she noticed a tunnel and bright light.
She ended up flat.
She was completely lined up and the surgeon drained the blood from her head.
As she approached
She said she chatted with her dead grandmother and uncle, who escorted her back to the operating room.
She said that when they looked down at her body, when the doctor restarted her heart, she could hear the song "Hotel California" played by the eagle in the operating room ".
She said her body looked like a train wreck and she said she didn't want to come back.
"My uncle pushed me," she said with a smile . ".
"When I hit the body, the line in the song is, 'You can check out anytime, but you can never leave.
I opened my eyes and I said, "You know, it's really insensitive!
"Later, Reynolds thought she had an illusion, which was consistent with the record at the time.
But a year later, she mentioned the details to the neurosurgeon.
Spetzler says her description matches his memory.
"From a scientific point of view," he said, "I have not explained at all how it happened.
Spetzler did not see all the details, but Michael Sabom did.
Sabom, a cardiologist in Atlanta, is studying nearby
Death experience.
"With Pam's permission, they sent me the records of her surgery," he said . ".
"Long story short, what she said happened to her is actually what Spetzler did to her in Arizona.
"According to the record, there are 20 doctors in the room.
There was a conversation about her left leg vein.
She was dejected.
They're playing at the California hotel"
"How about that bone saw?
Sabom got a photo from the manufacturer
It does look like an electric toothbrush.
Sabom wants to know, how can she know about these things?
She can't hear it [it]
"Because of what they did to her ears," he said . ".
"Also, both of her eyes were taped so she couldn't open her eyes and see what was going on.
As a result, her physical senses feel abnormal.
"Another explanation?
That's ridiculous, says Dr. Gerald Walley, an anesthetic.
"This report has absolutely not provided any evidence in the near-
"Death or other similar experiences," he said . "
Australian researcher, near-
The revelations about the death of the Renault case say her experience is easy to explain.
He said she was hit into consciousness when they cut her head.
At that time, they had not discharged blood from her brain.
He believed she could hear it.
Despite the click of earplugs
"There are all sorts of explanations," Woerlee said . ".
"One: the headphones or plugs are not so tight.
Second: Probably because of the sound transmission through the operating table itself.
"So Reynolds can hear the conversation.
As for seeing the Medas rex bone saw, he said, she recognized a voice from her childhood.
"She imagined in her mind a photo that was very similar to the machine or device she was familiar --
"A dental drill," Woerlee said.
Woerlee said that Renault experienced a sense of anesthesia in which a person is conscious but cannot move.
According to his data, this happened once in every 2,000 operations in 1991.
This does not convince cardiologist Sabom or neurosurgeon Spetzler.
They believe that the combination of anesthesia and low temperature-induced brain activity retardation means that Renault cannot form or retain memory for most of the time during surgery.
At the very least, the Renault story presents the possibility that consciousness can work even if the brain is offline, Sabom said.
"Is there some kind of consciousness that comes out of the non-functional physical brain? " Sabom asks.
"If so, does that mean there is a soul or a spirit? " Re-Creating Near-
In the end, Renault's story is just an anecdote.
In fact, this is the problem of almost all research.
Death experience.
After all, you can't do a clinical trial where you kill your lady.
Smith and tag were only trying to confirm her story as she walked through the tunnel to light.
Except Hollywood, of course.
In 1990 movies
Starring Julia Roberts and Kiver Sutherland)
Five medical students are trying to look to the next world by stopping their heart and returning to tell the story.
The film inspired Mario Borregard, a neurologist at the University of Montreal.
What if he could do the next best thing?
Because it's a study to stop people's hearts.
No, that's what he asked.
When he looks at what's going on in their heads, the experience of death brings them back to life.
"And these people seem to have different brains," bogregad said in his soft French accent.
"It's like a change in their brain that will make it easier for these people to keep in touch with the spiritual world every day.
Borig recruited 15 people-
Death experience.
One of them is Gilles bedd.
On 1973, Bede's heart stopped beating, and the moment before he was recovered, he was greeted by the twelve beings of light he described.
"I think it's like the breath of the universe.
Because it's like. . .
He said that when he breathed a breath slowly like a low wind, "very, very calm.
Since then, bedder has been meditating every day, and he says he often reconnects with the light.
The research question is, how does his brain react when he does this?
Permanent changes in brain activity?
In order to carry out the experiment, Bede was held in an isolation room at the boregmunier laboratory.
Bedder's head grew 32 electrodes to record his brainwave activity.
He was told to relax for a while.
Then he will be instructed to imagine his approach.
Death experience.
A few minutes later, burregg and his research assistant were watching the computer screen that recorded the brain waves in bedder.
They gasped happily in a slow and huge place.
Amplitude Delta waves of ups and downs on the screen-
Typical features of people who meditate deeply or sleep deeply.
The researchers then asked if Bede was able to connect with the light.
"Yes, it's from the inside," he said . ".
"This is full of love, smart. . . very powerful.
"It will take Beauregard a year to finish his approach-
Death experience.
I called a few weeks ago to ask him what he found.
"Like near.
"The Death experience triggers something at the nerve level of the brain," he said . ".
"From the perspective of brain activity, this change may be permanent.
It's like touching the death jump, boyag said --
Began the spiritual life of these people.
Their mental state brains look much like the brains of Catholic nuns and Buddhist monks who have spent thousands of hours in prayer and meditation.
Both groups showed unusually slow brain wave activity.
The researchers also found significant changes in brain regions related to positive emotions, attention and personal boundaries, as subjects were almost
The experience of death loses their sense of the body and blends with God or the "light.
"Brain chemistry or travel to heaven?
The Skeptic Woerlee says there's nothing amazing
Of course, there's nothing spiritual.
About these findings
Many people have experienced the function of the brain.
"The death experience has been changed," Woerlee said . ".
"That's right. It is altered.
Extreme hypoxia does change brain function.
Because it causes brain damage to larger cells in the brain.
"It's the chemistry of the brain, he says, not a trip to heaven.
In other words, Woerlee and Beauregard looked at the same image and came to the opposite conclusion.
When I interviewed experts on emerging spiritual sciences, I found that there was a dichotomy everywhere.
It's kind of like roxia's test: some researchers look at the data and say that the mental experience is just an electrical storm in the brain, or the brain's gasping for oxygen --
All of this can be explained in science.
It is also said that our brains reflect the encounter with God.
Almost always, the position of scientists on this issue has little to do with the clinical findings of any study.
This is almost related to the personal beliefs of scientists.
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