This is noteworthy in that it comes from the mid eighteenth century
long before modern ideas of medicine or spiritualism either. Yet it
remained clearly recognizable and useful in confirming that this
effect predates any modern enthusiasms.
This also tells us that there is a long non reported history here
held back mostly by our own bias. Thus the recent controversy served
to finaly get this front and center into our science so that it may
be properly studied.
We now have a critical mass of evidence that allows testable
hypothesis to be drawn and tested out.
Oldest Medical
Report of Near-Death Experience Discovered
By Bahar Gholipour,
Staff Writer | July 24, 2014 04:00pm ET
Reports of people
having "near-death" experiences go back to antiquity, but
the oldest medical description of the phenomenon may come
from a French physician around 1740, a researcher has found.
The report was written
by Pierre-Jean du Monchaux, a military physician from northern
France, who described a case of near-death experience in his book
"Anecdotes de Médecine." Monchaux speculated that too much
blood flow to the brain could explain the mystical feelings people
report after coming back to consciousness.
The description was
recently found by Dr. Phillippe Charlier, a medical doctor and
archeologist, who is well known in France for his forensic work on
the remains of historical figures. Charlier unexpectedly discovered
the medical description in a book he had bought for 1 euro (a little
more than $1) in an antique shop.
"I was just
interested in the history of medicine, and medical practices in the
past, especially during this period, the 18th century," Charlier
told Live Science. "The book itself was not an important one in
the history of medicine, but from a historian's point of
view, the possibility of doing retrospective diagnosis on such books,
it's something quite interesting."
To his surprise,
Charlier found a modern description of near-death experience from a
time in which most people relied on religion to explain near-death
experiences. [The 10 Most Controversial Miracles]
The book describes the
case of a patient, a famous apothecary (pharmacist) in Paris, who
temporarily fell unconscious and then reported that he saw a light so
pure and bright that he thought he must have been in heaven.
Today, near-death
experience is described as a profound psychological event with
transcendental and mystical elements that occurs after a
life-threatening crisis, Charlier said. People who experience the
phenomenon report vivid and emotional sensations including positive
emotions, feeling as though they have left their bodies, a sensation
of moving through a tunnel, and the experiences of communicating with
light and meeting with deceased people.
Charlier compared the
nearly 250-year-old description with today's "Greyson criteria,"
which is a scale that a psychiatrist developed in the 1980s to
measure the depth of people's near-death experiences, so that these
cases could be uniformly studied. The scale includes questions about
the perceptions people report during near-death experiences, for
example altered sense of time, life review and feelings of joy. A
score of 7 or higher out of a possible 32 is classified as a
near-death experience.
Although the data in
the old book were limited, Charlier determined that the patient would
have scored at least 12/32 on the Greyson criteria, Charlier said. He
published his findings last month in the journal Resuscitation.
In the 18th-century
case description, Monchaux also compared his patient with other
people who reported similar experiences, caused by drowning,
hypothermia and hanging.
The physician offered
a medical explanation for the bizarre sensations, too, but his
explanation was the opposite of what modern day physicians name as
the likely cause of near-death experience, Charlier said. Monchaux
speculated that in all of reported cases of near-death experience,
the patients were left with little blood in the veins in their skin,
and abundant blood flowing in the vessels within their brains, giving
rise to the vivid and strong sensations.
However, modern
researchers think it is likely the lack of blood flow and oxygen to
the brain that puts the organ in a state of full alarm and causes the
sensations associated with near-death experiences.
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