Neurosurgeon reveals what happens after your heart stops beating

The notion that one’s life might replay in their mind during their final moments has long been a topic of speculation.

Although this concept lacks scientific validation, a recent finding by a physician has prompted a reevaluation of our understanding of death.

Dr. Ajmal Zemmar and his research team have made a groundbreaking recording of a human brain in its dying stages. Speaking with the Daily Mail, Dr. Zemmar revealed that the brain’s activity suggested a revisitation of life memories, rather than an immediate cessation of consciousness.

This unexpected insight arose from an incidental case in 2022 in Vancouver, Canada, during Dr. Zemmar’s neurosurgery training.

A patient, aged 87, had successfully undergone surgery to address a subdural hematoma, which involves bleeding within the skull. However, on what would be his final day at the hospital, the patient began experiencing mild seizures.

In response, medical staff employed an electroencephalography (EEG) device, attaching electrodes to the patient’s scalp to monitor neurological activity. The EEG detects and amplifies brainwave patterns, displaying them as undulating lines on a recording.

Approximately 20 minutes into the test, however, the patient unexpectedly suffered cardiac arrest and died.

The ongoing EEG captured what Zemmar later realized was the first-ever recording of a naturally occurring human death.

The surgeon's discovery has made him rethink what he knows about death

The surgeon’s discovery has made him rethink what he knows about death

Dr Ajmal Zemmar and his team captured the first-ever recording of a dying human brain

Dr Ajmal Zemmar and his team captured the first-ever recording of a dying human brain

While it recorded 900 seconds of the event, from before and after the main died, the most striking finding occurred 30 to 60 seconds after the man’s heart stopped beating: the brain continued to produce gamma waves. 

Gamma brainwaves are the fastest frequencies associated with peak mental performance, including intense focus, heightened awareness, learning, memory and integrating complex information. 

Zemmar, now based in Louisville, Kentuckyexplained that gamma waves are the same high-frequency brain oscillations also observed when living people recall or view highly memorable life events, such as the birth of a child, a wedding or a graduation.

‘We need to rethink death,’ said Zemmar, adding that we can find comfort in knowing that when a loved one dies, they are no longer in pain, but instead revisiting meaningful moments from their life.

Zemmar also stressed that producing gamma waves requires high-level brain activity, not something that occurs accidentally. 

‘It suggests that there’s some coordinated activity going on,’ he noted, adding that the discovery was a ‘paradigm shift’ from the Hollywood depiction of instant brain silence when the heart stops.

The newly discovered pattern, according to Zemmar, also provided the first neurophysiological evidence supporting reports from approximately 14,000 near-death experience survivors who consistently describe a life flashback during clinical death. 

Until this recording, no scientific mechanism had explained those accounts. 

While it recorded 900 seconds of the event, from before and after the main died, the most striking finding occurred 30 to 60 seconds after the man's heart stopped beating: the brain continued to produce gamma waves

While it recorded 900 seconds of the event, from before and after the main died, the most striking finding occurred 30 to 60 seconds after the man’s heart stopped beating: the brain continued to produce gamma waves

Although initially cautious because the finding came from a single case, Zemmar said two additional human cases identified by a separate research group at the University of Michigan have since confirmed the same gamma-wave surge.

In 2023, Michigan researchers found that two patients who were thought to be brain-dead experienced sudden bursts of brain activity after being taken off life support, the same gamma waves as Zemmar had observed. 

‘There are three cases in humans now,’ Zemmar said. ‘It’s not a lot, but it’s something, better than none.’ 

He also suggested that the brain could be biologically programmed to manage the transition into death, potentially orchestrating a series of physiological and neurological events rather than simply shutting off instantly. 

Zemmar, who once adhered strictly to provable science, now believes reducing uncertainty around death can comfort both the dying and the bereaved. 

Drawing on teachings from Vietnamese Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh about the ‘seven bodies,’ he noted that only the physical body departs at death, while other dimensions – emotional influence, inspiration and guidance – remain. 

‘The person who leaves us doesn’t stop interacting and influencing us,’ he said.

Ultimately, Zemmar hopes the research helps humanity confront an inevitable experience with less fear.

‘Death affects every human,’ he concluded. ‘If we reimagine the way that death looks like and we try to find our comfort and our peace with that, I think those things may help humans to think about death in a different way.’ 

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