Near death experiences. What causes that?

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In summary, near death experiences are a set of diverse perceptions or hallucinations, which can be induced through the use of electrodes or chemicals such as DMT. These experiences have been reported in individuals who have experienced cardiac arrest, despite scientific expectations that there would be no brain function during this time. The nature of these experiences and their potential usefulness or evolutionary purpose remains a mystery, and further scientific research and experimentation is needed to better understand them. Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, has been found to produce many of the same features as a near-death experience, providing insight into how these experiences may occur in the brain.
  • #1
ryokan
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Near death experiences implie a set of diverse perceptions or hallucinations.
Two or three years ago, a team was able to induce with electrodes out of body experiences.
What are the biological causes of near death experiences?
Is there any explanation from an evolutive viewpoint?
 
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  • #2
I have read that DMT is secreted via the pineal gland during near death experiences. DMT is one of the most potent hallucinogens known to man.

Indians and such would try to focus their meditative powers on the "third eye" (the pineal) in order to stimulate it to produce DMT, then they would travel to great places and have spiritual encounters.
 
  • #3
I remember watching a documentary about death that was on about people seeing "white light at the end of a tunnel" as near death experience. However, this is an effect that is experienced also when humans are subjected to high accelerations. I can't remember exactly what the logic was but the documentary seemed to portray that this "white light at the end of a tunnel" effect is an illusion that results from the way brain works.
 
  • #4
The basic question would be: If near death experiences are evoked by some neurotransmitters, What would be its usefulness? Or, similarly, why these experiences are conserved by evolution?
 
  • #5
Some scientists feel that many questions remain. For example, NDE are found where no brain function is seen in the normal EEG's during the perceived experience. Given this, whether they be hallucinations or genuine memories of events in the ER or elsewhere, the fact that detailed and clear memories are formed under these conditions is difficult to explain. Apparently "deep" brain waves are found that are not detected with a normal EEG, but how these deep functions would allow for complex memory formation is apparently not well understood.
 
  • #6
During a near-death experience, the body is in a crisis. It is not so difficult to imagine that the brain becomes disorganized and there is a release of stress hormones.

I once saw an experiment where they isolated people in a dark and sound-proof room. They stimulated the person's head with electrodes and asked what their sensations were. Certain areas provoked a feeling like there was someone in the room, while other areas provoked the vision of light. It would be interesting to look up the experiment and see whether repeat experiments were done.
 
  • #7
One of the most astonishing phenomena of the NDE is the out-of-body experience.
Two years ago, it was published a case where electrode stimulation could elicit something as an out-of-body perception: http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/Courses/psych113/OutofBody.pdf
 
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  • #8
Here's a good article that discusses the near-death experience:

http://www.csicop.org/si/2004-05/near-death-experience.html

It's in a recent issue of Skeptical Inquirer.
 
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  • #9
Until this can be explained the rest is moot.

Cardiac arrest patients are a subgroup of people who come closest to death. In such a situation an individual initially develops two out of three criteria (the absence of spontaneous breathing and heartbeat) of clinical death. Shortly afterwards (within seconds) these are followed by the third, which occurs due to the loss of activity of the areas of the brain responsible for sustaining life (brainstem) and thought processes (cerebral cortex). Brain monitoring using EEG in animals and humans has also demonstrated that the brain ceases to function at that time. During a cardiac arrest, the blood pressure drops almost immediately to unrecordable levels and at the same time, due to a lack of blood flow, the brain stops functioning as seen by flat brain waves (isoelectric line) on the monitor within around 10 seconds. This then remains the case throughout the time when the heart is given 'electric shock' therapy or when drugs such as adrenaline are given until the heartbeat is finally restored and the patient is resuscitated. Due to the lack of brain function in these circumstances, therefore, one would not expect there to be any lucid, well-structured thought processes, with reasoning and memory formation, which are characteristic of NDEs.

Nevertheless, and contrary to what we would expect scientifically, studies have shown that 'near death experiences' do occur in such situations. This therefore raises a question of how such lucid and well-structured thought processes, together with such clear and vivid memories, occur in individuals who have little or no brain function. In other words, it would appear that the mind is seen to continue in a clinical setting in which there is little or no brain function. In particular, there have been reports of people being able to 'see' details from the events that occurred during their cardiac arrest, such as their dentures being removed.

http://www.datadiwan.de/SciMedNet/library/articlesN75+/N76Parnia_nde.htm
 
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  • #10
Is death a biological "singularity"?

NDE would be considered as a form of conscience. They aren't perceived as hallucinations by the subjects neither by the observers. So, the explanation of NDE could be so difficult as the explanation of conscience by mechanistic hypothesis.
Furthermore, it seems that it is need a lot of scientific observations and, perhaps, controlled experiments with electrodes or chemicals in healthy subjects to search manifestations of NDE.
I think that it is particulary important a best scientific control of out-of-body experiences.
Death is associated to irreversibility. But dying has a duration.
By far analogy to physics, could we see the dying process as an entry into a form of biological "singularity"? If so, both observation and experimentation would constitute a very hard problem.
 
  • #11
The following is an abstract of a presentation on the topic of ketamine and NDEs by Karl Jansen of the University of Auckland. The presentation itself was pretty much word for word what is included in the abstract.

Abstract: Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic with powerful hallucinogenic and psychedelic properties, including out-of-body experiences, transcendence of time, an extension of awareness beyond consensus reality into other universes, and other effects. Ketamine can produce every feature of a near-death experience (NDE) (Jansen 2001), including the conviction that one has died, awareness leaving the body, ringing/buzzing/ whistling sounds followed by travel through a tunnel at high speed, emerging into light, communion with God, and a life review.
Because we know how ketamine acts in the brain, this provides us with an understanding of how NDE’s arise. Ketamine blocks ion channels attached to NMDA receptors, and causes a blockage so that salts cannot enter the cell. The neurotransmitter glutamate crosses the gap between cells and binds to NMDA receptors, turning the chemical key which should allow ions to enter the cell. However, while the tunnel is blocked by ketamine, this is not possible.

NDE’s also involve blockade of NMDA receptors. A sudden fall in O2 or blood sugar, a rise in CO2 (e.g. during a heart attack), and other factors cause a flood release of glutamate. This over-excites cells which die. This is called ‘excito-toxicity’. The glutamate flood also activates apoptotic genes which trigger the cell to commit suicide. Ketamine can prevent this brain damage via the same mechanism which is important to its psychedelic effects: blockade of channels so that ‘the ion sea’ cannot rush into the cells. This led to the prediction that the brain would have its own, natural protective mechanisms against the glutamate flood (Jansen 2001). There would be a huge evolutionary advantage in the development of a protective mechanism involving a counter-flood of natural NMDA receptor-complex blockers, producing ketamine-like NDE effects. While a person is having an NDE at the psychological level, the brain is thus protecting itself from excito-toxic damage. Natural blockers include NAAG (N-acetyl-aspartyl-glutamate), magnesium and kynurenic acid, all of which protect cells from excito-toxic damage.
People deprived of oxygen for long periods, e.g. after a heart attack, and who report NDE’s, sometimes survive with unimpaired brains. This lack of damage may result from an inherited mechanism for blocking over-excitation. Thus people who can have an NDE may be less likely to suffer brain damage. These may be the same group who report psychedelic experiences with ketamine. Dreams, ketamine ‘journeys’ and NDE’s are all states in which there is a dramatically reduced sensory input from the outside world. Those who do not recall dreams also do not recall ketamine ‘journeys’. The % who recall dreams is about the same as the % reporting ‘emergence phenomena’ after ketamine: about 40%, which is the % of the population who have had some kind of NDE. Genetic differences may be responsible, expressing themselves as different forms of NMDA receptors.

Ref: Jansen KLR (2001a) Ketamine: Dreams and Realities. Sarasota, Florida: Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (ISBN 0-9660019-3-1) (Available from www.maps.org).
 
  • #12
Abstract: Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic with powerful hallucinogenic and psychedelic properties, including out-of-body experiences, transcendence of time, an extension of awareness beyond consensus reality into other universes, and other effects. Ketamine can produce every feature of a near-death experience (NDE) (Jansen 2001), including the conviction that one has died, awareness leaving the body, ringing/buzzing/ whistling sounds followed by travel through a tunnel at high speed, emerging into light, communion with God, and a life review.

One key element of the NDE is the assimilation of real, new information. This is not mentioned.
 
  • #13
I have just read the interesting article of van Lommel et al published in The Lancet 2001;358:2039 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/...ve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=11755611 (That links only to abstract)
These authors made a prospective study on survivors of cardiac arrest. They found a NDE core experience in 12% of survivors.
From their results, I find very interesting the fact that "no medical, pharmacological or psychological factor affected the frequency of the experience". It is also very interesting the description of a "veridical out-of-body experience of a resuscitated patient".
 
  • #14
Autoscopy and Out-of-Body Experience

Out of body experiences would be the most interesting and testable elements of a NDE.
A similar phenomenon related to out-of-body experiences is Autoscopy, defined as a visual experience where the subject sees an image of him/herself in external space, viewed from within his/her own physical body. Such experience seems to be linked to neurological / psychiatric pathology, Searching in PubMed, I found only 30 citations using "autoscopy" as search criterion.
 
  • #15
hypnagogue said:
The following is an abstract of a presentation on the topic of ketamine and NDEs by Karl Jansen of the University of Auckland. The presentation itself was pretty much word for word what is included in the abstract.

Ref: Jansen KLR (2001a) Ketamine: Dreams and Realities. Sarasota, Florida: Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (ISBN 0-9660019-3-1) (Available from www.maps.org).

In a search in PubMed on NDE and ketamine, I have found only two references: (both of Jansen):
A review of the nonmedical use of ketamine: use, users and consequences.
J Psychoactive Drugs. 2000 Oct-Dec;32(4):419-33.

Neuroscience and the near-death experience: roles for the NMSA-PCP receptor, the sigma receptor and the endopsychosins.
Med Hypotheses. 1990 Jan;31(1):25-9.

Searching by Jansen KL, I have found 28 references, from which only three seems to reflect his hypothesis.

So, I think that the ketamine hypothesis is lacking of enough scientific basis at the moment.
 
  • #16
OBEs and NDEs

One thing about near death experiences that science has yet to explain is that some NDEs include OBEs (out of body experience) where people have saw from a perspective outside of their bodies and desribe events that would be impossibe to view from "inside' the body. Some have even traveled to other rooms in a hospital and are able to desribe physical events and things.

I am currently going to be reading the best selling book (from the 70s) "Life After Life" by Dr. Raymond Moody. I suggest it if you wish to hear about NDEs

RAD
 
  • #17
Wow wow! Wait! What is NDE, DMT and EEG?
 
  • #18
RAD4921 said:
I am currently going to be reading the best selling book (from the 70s) "Life After Life" by Dr. Raymond Moody. I suggest it if you wish to hear about NDEs
I have read the Moody's book. It is only a descriptive book, although interesting, entitled with the conclusion: There is life after death.

With independence of personal conclusions on life after death, I think interesting the study of the biological substrates of the near death experience. Ia agree: the topic most difficult to be explained is the out-of-body experience. Nevertheless, it was recorded a similar experience with electrode stimulation. Autoscopy is a rare phenomenon with some analogies to the out-of-body experience.
 
  • #19
Thallium said:
Wow wow! Wait! What is NDE, DMT and EEG?


NDE: Near Death Experience

DMT: N,N-Dimethyltryptamine

EEG: Electroencephalogram
 
  • #20
thunderfvck said:
I have read that DMT is secreted via the pineal gland during near death experiences. DMT is one of the most potent hallucinogens known to man.

Indians and such would try to focus their meditative powers on the "third eye" (the pineal) in order to stimulate it to produce DMT, then they would travel to great places and have spiritual encounters.

I have just read this abstract http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/...ve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15002845

Do you have more information from peer-review jorunals on DMT and NDE?
 
  • #21
Lavoisier

It is currently admitted that death equals to brain death.
Antoine Lavoisier was caught up in the revolution and faced beheading. He asked friends to observe closely as he would continue blinking as long as possible after being killed. He was reported to have blinked for 15 seconds after decapitation
I don’t know if the story is apocryphal, but it would be a terrible case of NDE manifestation (very near)
:frown:
 
  • #22
A book recommendation

DMT: The Spirit Molecule: A Doctor's Revolutionary Research into the Biology of Near-Death and Mystical Experiences
by Rick Strassman MD


Look inside this book
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25 used & new from $11.40
 
  • #23
RAD4921 said:
DMT: The Spirit Molecule: A Doctor's Revolutionary Research into the Biology of Near-Death and Mystical Experiences
by Rick Strassman MD

It seems interesting.
I see two curious associations. One with the role of pineal gland in Descartes (as well as the "third" eye of some philosophies).
I find other association with a recent science fiction book: "Passage" by Connie Willis (too boring for me).
 

1. What is a near death experience (NDE)?

A near death experience is a profound psychological event that can occur when a person is close to death or has been declared clinically dead. It is characterized by a variety of subjective experiences such as vivid memories, heightened senses, and a sense of being outside of one's body.

2. What are the common features of an NDE?

Although each NDE is unique, there are several common features that have been reported by individuals who have experienced them. These include a feeling of peace and well-being, a sense of leaving one's body, traveling through a tunnel or towards a bright light, encountering deceased loved ones or spiritual beings, and a life review.

3. What causes an NDE?

There is no definitive answer to this question as the exact cause of NDEs is still a topic of debate among scientists and researchers. Some theories suggest that NDEs are a result of physiological changes in the brain during times of extreme stress or trauma. Others propose that they may be a product of psychological and cultural factors, such as religious beliefs and expectations. Further research is needed to fully understand the underlying causes of NDEs.

4. Are NDEs real or just a product of the brain?

This is a difficult question to answer definitively as it ultimately depends on one's personal beliefs and interpretations. From a scientific perspective, research suggests that NDEs may be a combination of both physiological and psychological factors. While some aspects of the experience may be a result of changes in the brain, the profound and transformative effects reported by individuals cannot be discounted.

5. Can anyone have an NDE or is it only limited to certain individuals?

NDEs have been reported by people from all walks of life, regardless of age, gender, or cultural background. They can occur in a variety of situations, such as during a medical emergency, a near-death accident, or even during meditation or spiritual practices. While not everyone may have an NDE, it is not limited to a specific group of individuals.

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