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Near Death Experiences NDE

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Title: Near Death Experiences NDE


1
Near Death Experiences(NDE)
  • Presented by
  • Jennifer Kwok
  • Jennifer Tom
  • Luong Phan

2
(No Transcript)
3
What is the near death experience?
  • Occurs when a person enters clinical death and
    usually has a profound personal experience which
    can include

4
What is the near death experience?
  • Occurs when a person enters clinical death and
    usually has a profound personal experience which
    can include
  • A sensation of leaving the body

5
What is the near death experience?
  • Occurs when a person enters clinical death and
    usually has a profound personal experience which
    can include
  • A sensation of leaving the body
  • Following a bright light

6
What is the near death experience?
  • Occurs when a person enters clinical death and
    usually has a profound personal experience which
    can include
  • A sensation of leaving the body
  • Following a bright light
  • Encounter with a higher being (God, Buddha,
    Aliens, etc.)

7
Background Information
  • What is clinical death then?

8
Background Information
  • What is clinical death then?
  • Clinical death no cardiac output, no
    respiration, fixed dilated pupils

9
Background Information
  • What is clinical death then?
  • Clinical death no cardiac output, no
    respiration, fixed dilated pupils
  • Focus of our research evidence are centered on
    cardiac arrest patients because they all exhibit
    clinical death

10
Background Information
  • Raymond Moody (1975)
  • Wrote Life After Life
  • First compilation of NDE survivor stories
  • Coined the term near death experience

11
Background Information
  • Why care about NDE?
  • NDE have been recorded through history and in
    many different cultures.
  • Description of Ers experience in Platos
    Republic resemble modern NDEs.
  • Best chance to study death because these patients
    return from dying

12
Theorized Causes
  • Disturbance of brain chemistry (Parnia 2001)
  • alpha-endopsychosin, hypoxia, NDMA, etc.

13
Theorized Causes
  • Disturbance of brain chemistry (Parnia 2001)
  • alpha-endopsychosin, hypoxia, NDMA, etc.
  • Psychological response to perceived threat of
    death (Parnia 2001)
  • Wish fulfillment in response to perceived threat
    of death

14
Theorized Causes
  • REM intrusion (Nelson 2006)
  • When things normally experienced during sleep
    carry over into wakefulness

15
Theorized Causes
  • REM intrusion (Nelson 2006)
  • When things normally experienced during sleep
    carry over into wakefulness
  • Usually occurs before sleep or just after
    wakefulness

16
Theorized Causes
  • REM intrusion (Nelson 2006)
  • When things normally experienced during sleep
    carry over into wakefulness
  • Usually occurs before sleep or just after
    wakefulness
  • Occurs in times of extreme stress in which one
    may be in REM sleep and partially awake at the
    same time

17
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • REM centers in the brainstem
  • Higher brain areas in the cortex quickly blank
    out during hypoxia, the brainstem (since its
    more primitive) remains active for several
    minutes

18
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • REM centers in the brainstem
  • Higher brain areas in the cortex quickly blank
    out during hypoxia, the brainstem (since its
    more primitive) remains active for several
    minutes
  • An NDE that seems to last many minutes might
    occur in the few seconds right before or right
    after the cortex blanks out

19
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • REM centers in the brainstem
  • Higher brain areas in the cortex quickly blank
    out during hypoxia, the brainstem (since its
    more primitive) remains active for several
    minutes
  • An NDE that seems to last many minutes might
    occur in the few seconds right before or right
    after the cortex blanks out
  • NDE may also be very brief but be perceived as
    prolong because REM compresses time

20
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • Vagus nerve A cranial nerve that connects the
    brainstem to the heart and lungs
  • REM intrusion and the vagus nerve (Fox 2006)
  • In times of extreme stress (heart attacks or near
    drowning) blood pressure or blood oxygen levels
    quickly drop, or levels of carbon dioxide in the
    blood quickly rise.
  • This stimulates the vague nerve
  • Since the REM centers are in the brainstem, this
    causes the REM centers to snap on without warning

21
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • Evidence for vagus nerve in REM intrusion (Fox
    2006)
  • Animal studies
  • When electrically stimulating the vagus nerve in
    various animal preparations, stimulation enhances
    REM and causes atonia
  • Stimulating the vagus nerve in cats pushes them
    into REM sleep within 45 seconds
  • Human studies
  • Epilepsy patients whose condition is treated with
    implants stimulate their vagus nerve also slip
    more quickly into REM during daytime naps

22
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • Temporal-parietal junction (Fox 2006)
  • Known to cause out-of-body sensations when it
    malfunctions
  • Since it is located at the end of a tree of blood
    vessels, if blood pressure drops, perfusion in
    this area is first to go
  • Thus if blood pressure drops when one is
    fainting, this explains why they may experience
    NDE-like symptoms

23
Theorized Causes REM Int. Cont
  • Could be possible that NDE enhances subsequent
    REM intrusion
  • SUPPORTED by people with Post Traumatic Stress
    Disorder subsequently have more frequent REM
    intrusion

24
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • REM intrusion during wakefulness is a normal
    occurrence but infrequently recognized (Nelson
    2005)

25
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • REM intrusion during wakefulness is a normal
    occurrence but infrequently recognized (Nelson
    2005)
  • Underlies other clinical conditions such as
    narcolepsy

26
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Common feature of narcolepsy
  • Neurological disorder characterized by
    uncontrollable bouts of sleep that can cause
    elaborate hallucinations and out-of-body
    experiences

27
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Common feature of narcolepsy
  • Neurological disorder characterized by
    uncontrollable bouts of sleep that can cause
    elaborate hallucinations and out-of-body
    experiences
  • Narcoleptics REM systems can activate leading to
    out of body experiences

28
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Common feature of narcolepsy
  • Neurological disorder characterized by
    uncontrollable bouts of sleep that can cause
    elaborate hallucinations and out-of-body
    experiences
  • Narcoleptics REM systems can activate leading to
    out of body experiences
  • Combination of dreaming and wakefulness causes
    people with narcolepsy to recall their
    hallucinations vividly

29
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Another form of REM intrusion is sleep paralysis
  • Awaken with part of brain still in REM sleep so
    body feel paralyzed
  • Result terrified that youre unable to move,
    visual/auditory hallucinations, and pressure on
    the chest

30
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Nelson surveyed of REM intrusion 55 people who
    had NDE from a variety of situations and 55
    controls matched for age and gender
  • Found that around 60 of NDE group reported
    having experiencing some kind of symptoms of REM
    intrusion, either before or after their NDE,
    compared with just 24 of the control
  • REM intrusions in NDE group were more elaborate
    (not just sleep paralysis but also hallucinations

31
Evidence REM intrusion and NDE
  • Nelson surveyed of REM intrusion 55 people who
    had NDE from a variety of situations and 55
    controls matched for age and gender
  • Not conclusive but good preliminary correlational
    experience
  • Not conclusive because possible that REM
    intrusion makes you more susceptible to NDE also
    suggests that you do not need to have a
    near-death experience to have NDE

32
Why NDE is an ASC
  • NDE is a deviation from the normal waking state
  • Experience clinical death
  • Experience another reality
  • Large population can experience NDE
  • Prevalence of REM intrusion
  • 10 cardiac arrest patients develop memories
    consistent with NDE
  • What about the other 90? Still experience but
    dont remember?

33
References
  • Bosveld, Jane. "Soul Search Can Science Ever
    Decipher the Secrets of the Human Soul?" Discover
    magazine, June 2007.
  • Fox, Douglas. "Light at the End of the Tunnel."
    New Scientist. Retrieved from the web,
    http//www.newscientist.com, 2008 March 3.
  • Nelson, Kevin R., MD et al (2006). Does the
    arousal system contribute to near death
    experience? Neurology, 661003-1009.
  • Parnia, Sam et al (2001). A qualitative and
    quantitative study of the incidence, features and
    aetiology of near death experiences in cardiac
    arrest survivors. Resuscitation,  48149-156.
  • Parnia, Sam and Peter Fenwick (2002). Near death
    experiences in cardiac arrest visions of a dying
    brain or visions of a new science of
    consciousness. Resuscitation, 525-11.
  • Wallace, Benjamin and Leslie E. Fisher.
    Consciousness and Behavior, Fourth Edition.
    Waveland Press Inc., Prospect Heights, pp.
    218-220.
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