Literature DB >> 25377188

Near-death experience: arising from the borderlands of consciousness in crisis.

Kevin R Nelson1.   

Abstract

Brain activity explains the essential features of near-death experience, including the perceptions of envelopment by light, out-of-body, and meeting deceased loved ones or spiritual beings. To achieve their fullest expression, such near-death experiences require a confluence of events and draw upon more than a single physiological or biochemical system, or one anatomical structure. During impaired cerebral blood flow from syncope or cardiac arrest that commonly precedes near-death, the boundary between consciousness and unconsciousness is often indistinct and a person may enter a borderland and be far more aware than is appreciated by others. Consciousness can also come and go if blood flow rises and falls across a crucial threshold. During crisis the brain's prime biologic purpose to keep itself alive lies at the heart of many spiritual experiences and inextricably binds them to the primal brain. Brain ischemia can disrupt the physiological balance between conscious states by leading the brainstem to blend rapid eye movement (REM) and waking into another borderland of consciousness during near-death. Evidence converges from many points to support this notion, including the observation that the majority of people with a near-death experience possess brains predisposed to fusing REM and waking consciousness into an unfamiliar reality, and are as likely to have out-of-body experience while blending REM and waking consciousness as they are to have out-of-body experience during near-death.
© 2014 New York Academy of Sciences.

Entities:  

Keywords:  consciousness; death; near-death experience

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25377188     DOI: 10.1111/nyas.12576

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  3 in total

1.  Near-death experiences--Neuroscience perspectives on near-death experiences.

Authors:  Kevin Nelson
Journal:  Mo Med       Date:  2015 Mar-Apr

Review 2.  Semiology and Mechanisms of Near-Death Experiences.

Authors:  Costanza Peinkhofer; Jens P Dreier; Daniel Kondziella
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2019-07-27       Impact factor: 5.081

3.  Characterization of near death experiences using text mining analyses: A preliminary study.

Authors:  Vanessa Charland-Verville; Demetrius Ribeiro de Paula; Charlotte Martial; Helena Cassol; Georgios Antonopoulos; Blaine Alexander Chronik; Andrea Soddu; Steven Laureys
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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