News about the possibility of revitalizing people after death can change our understanding of life and death. Doctor and researcher Sam Parnyia from the Medical Center of New York University states that traditional ideas about death can be radically outdated. This discovery, The Telegraph , can have deep consequences for medicine and ethics.
The doctor considers death not as a final event, but as a "reversible state". In his book Lucid Dying, parsna shares the results of 30-year studies that rethink life and death. He is convinced that cardiac arrest or cessation of brain activity is not the end, but only a process that can be turned back with the right approach.
Parnya and his team have achieved "impressive success" in the intensive care of patients, increasing survival after a cardiac arrest twice as compared to the US average.
He argues that the brain and other organs remain viable for several hours or even days after death, and that scientific achievements of recent years give reason to believe that returning to life will be possible not only for animals but also for humans.
Among the examples of Parnya is a study where the pig's brain maintained activity 14 hours after death. He also recalls cases where hypothermia people have returned to life for many hours after cardiac arrest, thanks to advanced technologies and equipment.
Although Crionic remains at the level of theory, Parnya believes that cooling really protects the body and increases the chances of successful recovery.
However, despite optimism, he acknowledges that modern medicine is not always ready for such radical changes, which is associated with the overload of hospitals and lack of resources. However, he believes that in the future, resuscitation and resuscitation methods will become more effective and accessible, and death will cease to be an inevitable end.
Parnya is convinced that over time, humanity will change its attitude to death, and what seems fiction today in terms of the revival of dead people will become a common medical practice