Doctor reveals the frightening words patients hear in the moments after their body dies while the brain hangs on

Sometimes it’s the living who haunt the dead.A New York primary care doctor redefined the phrase “life after death” after finding that the brain remains active even after one’s heart stops, as detailed morbid study in the journal Resuscitation.This means that the alleged deceased can likely hear the doctors announcing their time of death after they cease resuscitation efforts, the Daily Mail reported.This macabre revelation was brought to light by Dr.Sam Parnia, of the NYU Langone Medical Center in New York.

He had spoken to patients who were revived after being declared clinically dead — when their heart stops beating — finding that they were able to recall events transpiring in their room with astounding accuracy.In the Frankenstein-like study, Parnia shed light on why their postmortem memory is so lucid — because of “normal and near normal brain activity found up to an hour into resuscitation,” he previously told the Post.“We were not only able to show the markers of lucid consciousness — we were also able to show that these experiences are unique and universal,” he said.“They’re different from dreams, illusions and delusions.” This didn’t seem to jive with doctor’s methods of declaring a patient dead when their ticker stopped.To shed light on this surprising disconnect between heart and mind, Parnia and his team examined brain activity and awareness among 53 patients who survived cardiac arrest at 25 hospitals, mostly in the US and UK.A staggering 40% of participants reported having memories or conscious thoughts, per the clip.

“In death, they have a perception that they are separate from their body,” Dr.Parnia said, “and then they can move around.

But they’re in that [hospital] room and they’re gathering information.They felt that they were fully conscious.”The clinically dead patients also had spikes of gamma, delta, theta, alpha and beta brain waves associated with thinking and awareness, as determined by an e...

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Publisher: New York Post

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