Discovered What Happens to the Brain Just minutes Before Man Dies

What happens to our brain moments before it dies? According to the discovery of a team of neurologs from “Charité hospital -The Universityätsmedizin Berlin”, an electric wave of activity naming “sul “Experts examining cerbral activity in 9 patients at the time of death noticed an explosion of activity that seems to precede the fatal closure of [...]
According to the discovery of a team of neurologs from “Charité hospital -The Universityätsmedizin Berlin”, an electric wave of activity naming “sul “
Experts examining cerbral activity in 9 patients in the time of death noticed an explosion of activity that seems to precede the fatal closure of the body's most vital organ.
This finding suggests that the conscience may still be present in many minutes, even though the rest of the body may not show signs of life.
This increases the likelihood that in five minutes the brain can be restored.
All patients related to the study had fatal cerebral lesions. Experts hoped that by placing electrodes in the brain of subjects, they could detect both the moment and the mechanisms of events during the death process.
To their surprise, they found that within five minutes, the heart had stopped beating, brain cells, or neurons could still work.
A type of “sunam cerbral” marked the moment in which these neurons were extinguished before the final and irreversible death. Following the circus arrest, the spread of depositation (the reduction of neuron potential) marks the loss of electrochemical energy stored in brain cells and the release of toxic processes that eventually lead to death.
“Should be stressed what is restored, to a certain point when the circulation”- explains Jens Dreyer, head of research. The neurons die when blood no longer flows by reducing them from oxygen. When that happens, neurons use energy reserves for a few minutes before they die completely.
This is when the mechanisms that neurons use to support separate ions begin to fail. Ours are electrical burdens formed when atoms lose or acquire electrons.
The breakdown of these particles releases a massive amount of electrochemical energy into the brain, which neurons try to consume violently as fuel. This process known as the spread of deposit is characterized by the hyperactivity of neurons followed by sudden calm. This silence marks the counting back to death.
The last wave appears to mark the point where neurons remain active for the last time.
For now, scientists do not have a clear method of diagnosing cerebral death, and they are not sure when the entire capacity of conscience is lost.
The study does not have a direct effect on patient care, but in the future it can improve diagnosis and treatment. Data may be needed to treat heart attack and cerbrovascular accident that fulfills the strain to restore circulation into the organism.












