What Happens to Our Brain When We Die?
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Unlike other big events in life, such as giving birth to a child, buying a house of your own, or getting accepted to a new job, discussions surrounding death are quite difficult to talk about, but no less important.
Talking about dying can be hard, and most of the time, it is a taboo subject. When dealing with death and dying, there is no right or wrong way. A person’s beliefs, values, culture, experiences and circumstances will shape their own views.
But that doesn’t mean that we can’t attempt to understand it. Knowing nothing about dying makes it scarier, after all.
In a recent study published to Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, doctors have made an exceptional discovery after they accidentally happened to observe, and record, a dying brain in its final moments.
And what they witnessed can only be described as a once-in-a-lifetime moment.
The study accidentally found flashes in the brain that could suggest we relive memories when we die. Credit: Frontiers in Ageing Neuroscience.
However, in an unanticipated turn of events, the patient had a heart attack and passed away during the recordings. And at the cost of the patient’s life, the doctors were allowed by chance to record the activity of a dying human brain for the first time ever.
The study revealed that 30 seconds before and after the patient’s heart beat its last, there was a recorded increase in very specific brain waves known as gamma oscillations, which are linked to brain activities such as memory retrieval, meditation, and dreaming.
Meaning, for a whole minute, the patient’s brain was reliving their whole life, in a process called “life recall”. You could imagine the patient entering into a peaceful dreamlike state, wherein they were watching a sort of film reel of their best memories, showing all in the span of a few seconds. Your life literally flashes before your eyes.
As the patient’s body and heart shut down, the brain delivers its final task of remembering a life's best moments.
As our bodies shut down, our brain plays a sort of film reel of our best memories. Credit: iStock.
And even though there are so many more studies that need to take place regarding the subject, Dr Zemmar hopes the data the dying patient had given to them would prove to be a key factor in understanding our body’s most complex organ during its near-death period.
“This is just one single case study, with a brain that had already been injured due to epilepsy, but this might pave the wave for a greater understanding about what happens to us when we die,” said the scientist.