What happens when we die? Insights from resuscitation science

On Monday, November 18, 2019 the

New York Academy of Sciences

and the

Critical Care and Resuscitation Research Program at NYU Langone

will present a two part event titled

What Happens When We Die?

at the Academy’s offices in downtown Manhattan.

Death is a universal human experience, yet it remains one of life’s great mysteries. Traditionally viewed as an absolute irreversible endpoint, recent scientific studies have shown brain cells to be resilient to the effects of oxygen deprivation after the heart stops and a person dies. This has led to a major paradigm shift in science, as we now understand that death may be reversible, even hours after it has taken place. This insight opens up new opportunities for treatments to save

lives

and

brains

beyond cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Intriguingly, many people report experiencing consciousness and cognitive activity after the heart stops, raising questions regarding current models of the nature of consciousness.

During the

symposium

, clinicians and researchers will discuss recent findings that have upended conventional notions about the nature of brain injury and death. These include a recent study from Yale, in which brain function was restored in 32 post-mortem pig brains four or more hours after death, and the AWAreness during REsuscitation (AWARE) II study, which is exploring what happens to the mind and consciousness at the time of cardiac arrest and clinical death. This study has already recruited 500 cardiac arrest subjects and is currently the largest of its type across 20 American and European hospitals. A complimentary upcoming project explores consciousness and cognitive activity in patients undergoing Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest (DHCA), a medical technique that biologically mimics cardiac arrest and death through cooling a patient’s body temperature to around 20 degrees Celsius.


Death is one of the few universal experiences guaranteed to every human. Yet the end of life is also one of life’s great mysteries, and research that seeks to illuminate the complex processes of death in the brain, body, mind and consciousness has wide-reaching ethical, social, and philosophical implications,

explained Dr. Parnia.

This symposium and panel discussion will bring together leading physicians and researchers in disciplines ranging from critical care and neurology to neuroscience and psychology, to chart a course for new directions in the study of resuscitation and consciousness. Clearly, the recalled experience surrounding death now merits further genuine investigation without prejudice.

Provocative, surprising, and challenging, these new avenues of research may inform strategies for improving quality survival, yet they also carry significant implications for organ donation programs, end-of-life decision-making, and understanding the nature of human consciousness.

Following the afternoon symposium, Dr. Parnia will moderate an evening panel discussion entitled


What Happens When We Die? Surviving Cardiac Arrest

.

The panel will explore the complex processes of death in the brain and body, and illuminate the bioethical implications of this new understanding for end-of-life planning, organ donation programs, and more.

Speakers and panelists for the two-part program include:

  • Lance Becker, MD, FAHA, The Feinstein Institute for Medical
    Research on

    Cardiac Arrest and Post-Cardiac Arrest Syndrome: A Historical Review and Future Directions
  • Ariane Lewis, MD, NYU Langone Health on

    Critically Ill Brain in Cardiac Arrest
  • Samuel Tisherman, MD, University of Maryland School of Medicine on

    Suspended Animation
  • Daniele Stefano MD, PhD Candidate. Yale University School of Medicine

    Restoring Function to the Brain after Death
  • Cherie Amie, Cardiac Arrest Survivor, on

    The Experience of Cardiac Arrest Survival
  • Sam Parnia, MD, PhD, NYU School of Medicine on

    Consciousness, Awareness & Psychological Outcomes after Cardiac Arrest
  • Peter B. Forgacs, MD, Weill Cornell Medicine on

    Consciousness and Recovery
  • Shari Brosnahan, MD, NYU Langone Health on

    Neuroprotection Strategies for Cardiac Arrest
  • Tom Aufderheide, MD, MS, FACEP, FACC, FAHA, internationally recognized researcher in emergency cardiac care at the Medical College of Wisconsin
  • Sonja Lyubomirsky, PhD, distinguished happiness research psychologist at the University of California, Riverside
  • Stephan Mayer, MD, FCCM, world expert in neurological intensive care at Wayne State School of Medicine
  • Sarah Perman, MD, a leader in resuscitation science and post-cardiac arrest care at the University of Colorado School of Medicine

###


You can register to attend the afternoon symposium

What Happens When We Die? Insights from Resuscitation Science


here

, or the evening panel discussion

What Happens When We Die? Surviving Cardiac Arrest


here

. Both portions of the event will be available to remote audiences via

LiveStream

.


here

. Both portions of the event will also be available to remote audiences via

http://www.

livestream.

com/

newyorkacademyofsciences


About New York Academy of Sciences

The New York Academy of Sciences is an independent, not-for-profit organization that since 1817 has been committed to advancing science, technology, and society worldwide. With more than 20,000 members in 100 countries around the world, the Academy is creating a global community of science for the benefit of humanity. The Academy’s core mission is to advance scientific knowledge, positively impact the major global challenges of society with science-based solutions, and increase the number of scientifically informed individuals in society at large. Please visit us online at

http://www.

nyas.

org

.


The New York University Langone Health Critical Care and Resuscitation Program

is dedicated to researching methods to save the lives and brains of people who undergo cardiac arrest. Led by its director, Sam Parnia, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine, division of pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine, at NYU School of Medicine, the program brings together a multi-disciplinary team of experts across many specialties, including neurology, cardiology, and intensive care. Together, they hope to improve cardiac arrest prevention and treatment, as well as address the impact of new scientific discoveries on our understanding of what happens at death.

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-11/nyao-whw111419.php

Robert Birchard
212-298-8689
[email protected]
http://www.nyas.org 

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