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Health See other Health Articles Title: Crossing Over: How Science Is Redefining Life and Death Can death be reversible? And what are we learning about the gray zone between here and the other side? After toddler Gardell Martin fell into an icy stream in March 2015, he was dead for more than an hour and a half. Three and a half days later he left a hospital alive and well. His story is one of many prompting scientists to question the very meaning of death. . At first it seemed like nothing more than the worst headache shed ever had. So Karla Pérez22 years old, the mother of three-year-old Genesis, and five months pregnantwent into her mothers room to lie down, hoping it would pass. But the pain got worse, and as she vomited off the side of the bed, she told her younger brother to call 911. It was not quite midnight on Sunday, February 8, 2015. The ambulance raced Pérez from her home in Waterloo, Nebraska, to Methodist Womens Hospital in Omaha. She began to lose consciousness in the emergency room, and doctors put a tube down her throat to keep oxygen flowing to her fetus. They ordered a CT scan, and there it was: a massive brain bleed creating severe pressure in her skull. She had suffered a stroke, but amazingly her fetus was doing fine, the heartbeat strong and steady as if nothing were wrong. Neurologists did another CT scan at about two in the morning, and their worst fears were confirmed: Pérezs brain had become so swollen that the whole brain stem had pushed out through a small opening at the base of her skull. The Martins gather on their property in Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania. The father, Doyle, holds Gardell, now three, and mother Rose holds Galen. She was pregnant with Galen when Gardell fell into a frigid stream and had no heartbeat for more than an hour and a half. When they saw that, says Tifany Somer-Shely, the obstetrician whod cared for Pérez through her pregnancy with Genesis and with this baby too, they knew for sure that it wasnt going to end well. Pérez had landed at the ragged border between life and death, with a brain that had ceased functioning and would never recoverin other words, it was deadand a body that could be sustained mechanically, in this case for one reason only: to nurture her 22-week-old fetus until he was big enough to manage on his own. This borderland is becoming increasingly populated, as scientists explore how our existence is not a toggleon for alive, off for deadbut a dimmer switch that can move through various shades between white and black. In the gray zone, death isnt necessarily permanent, life can be hard to define, and some people cross over that great divide and returnsometimes describing in precise detail what they saw on the other side. Death is a process, not a moment, writes critical-care physician Sam Parnia in his book Erasing Death. Its a whole-body stroke, in which the heart stops beating but the organs dont die immediately. In fact, he writes, they might hang on intact for quite a while, which means that for a significant period of time after death, death is in fact fully reversible. How can death, the very essence of forever, be reversible? What is the nature of consciousness during that transition through the gray zone? A growing number of scientists are wrestling with such vexing questions. Picture of Linda Chamberlain, co-founder of cryonics company Alcor ENLARGE Linda Chamberlain, co-founder of the Arizona-based cryonics company Alcor, hugs the container where the body of her husband, Fred, is frozen in the hope that someday he can be thawed and revived. She plans to join him in cryo limbo when her time comes. Freds last words, she says, were Gee, I hope this works. In Seattle biologist Mark Roth experiments with putting animals into a chemically induced suspended animation, mixing up solutions to lower heartbeat and metabolism to near-hibernation levels. His goal is to make human patients who are having heart attacks a little bit immortal until they can get past the medical crisis that brought them to the brink of death. In Baltimore and Pittsburgh trauma teams led by surgeon Sam Tisherman are conducting clinical trials in which gunshot and stabbing victims have their body temperature lowered in order to slow bleeding long enough for surgeons to close up their wounds. The medical teams are using supercooling to do what Roth wants to do with chemicalskill their patients, temporarily, in order to save their lives. In Arizona cryonics experts maintain more than 130 dead clients in a frozen state thats another kind of limbo. Their hope is that sometime in the distant future, maybe centuries from now, these clients will be thawed and revived, technology having advanced to the point where they can be cured of whatever killed them. In India neuroscientist Richard Davidson studies Buddhist monks in a state called thukdam, in which biological signs of life have ceased yet the body appears fresh and intact for a week or more. Davidsons goal is to see if he can detect any brain activity in these monks, hoping to learn what, if anything, happens to the mind after circulation stops. And in New York, Parnia spreads the gospel of sustained resuscitation. He says CPR works better than people realize and that under proper conditionswhen the body temperature is lowered, chest compression is regulated for depth and tempo, and oxygen is reintroduced slowly to avoid injuring tissuesome patients can be brought back from the dead after hours without a heartbeat, often with no long- term consequences. Now hes investigating one of the most mysterious aspects of crossing over: why so many people in cardiac arrest report out-of-body or near- death experiences, and what those sensations might reveal about the nature of this limbo zone and about death itself. Picture of Nailah Winkfield and her daughter, Jahi McMath ENLARGE If I had listened to the doctors, Id be visiting my daughter in the cemetery, says Nailah Winkfield, whose daughter Jahi McMath was declared brain-dead in 2013, when she was 13. Winkfield insists that her daughter is not dead. Listen to Jahi McMaths story Nailah Winkfield talks about parents rights and holding on to hope. 02:0000:00 Oxygen plays a paradoxical role along the life-death border, according to Roth, of Seattles Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Ever since oxygen was discovered in the early 1770s, scientists have recognized it as essential to life, he says. What the 18th-century scientists didnt know is that oxygen is essential to life in a surprisingly nonbinary way. Yes, if you take away oxygen, you can kill the animal, Roth says. But if you further reduce the oxygen, the animal is alive again, but its suspended. He has shown that this works in soil nematodes, which are alive in air with as little as 0.5 percent oxygen and are dead if you reduce the oxygen to 0.1 percent. But if you then proceed quickly to a much lower level of oxygen0.001 percent or even lessthe worms enter a state of suspension where they need significantly less oxygen to survive. Its their way of preserving themselves during extreme deprivation, a bit like animals hibernating in winter. These oxygen-starved, suspended organisms appear to be dead but not permanently so, like a gas cooktop with only the pilot light on. Roth is trying to get to this pilot-light state by infusing experimental animals with an elemental reducing agent, such as iodide, that greatly decreases their oxygen needs. Soon hell try it in humans too. The goal is to minimize the damage that can occur from treatments after heart attacks. If iodide slows oxygen metabolism, the thinking is, it might help avoid the blowout injury that sometimes comes with treatments like balloon angioplasty. At this lower setting the damaged heart can just sip the oxygen coming in through the repaired vessel, rather than get flooded by it. Life and death are all about motion, according to Roth: In biology the less something moves, the longer it tends to live. Seeds and spores can have life spans of hundreds of thousands of yearsin other words, theyre practically immortal. Roth imagines a day when using an agent such as iodide, a technique that will soon be studied in early clinical trials in Australia, can give people that immortality for a momentthe moment they most need it, when their heart is in serious trouble. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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