On U.K. tv last night was a most interesting programme, Kill Me To Cure Me, about a 28 year old American man who had a potentially fatal brain aneurysm. The surgeon, Dr Robert Spetzler, used a technique whereby the body temperature was reduced from it`s normal 39.9 degrees C to 12 degrees C before carrying out the repair operation.
At this low temperature his body was clinically dead. There was no activity on the monitors whatsoever. His heart had stopped, there was no pulse or blood circulation, no breathing and no signs of electrical activity in his brain. The actual operation took seventeen minutes but the patient was in this "dead" state for an hour before his blood was reheated and he slowly made a full recovery with all faculties intact.
Dr Spetzler developed this technique after hearing about a young Swedish woman who had been trapped in freezing cold water under ice for about six hours, but could breathe until her heart had stopped. When recovered from under the ice she was clinically dead but after many long hours of resuscitation she gradually came back to life. In her case, however, it took a long time for her to make a full recovery.
During the programme the point was raised about the consciousness. What had happened to it and where did it go during this time? After all, the body was clinically dead and yet it returned. The surgeon stated that the only thing different in this clinical "death" and any other was the factor of temperature.
A woman who had undergone a similar experience said she had an OBE during her operation. She flew out of her body, heard them say "We have a problem", looked down on it then started to fly towards a small very bright tunnel of light during which time she saw her grandmother and was told she had to go back. Her diving re-entry back into her body was, apparently, a very painful experience. The man featured in the programme did not mention whether a similar thing had happened to him.
It did make me wonder as to why she should experience an OBE and others had not, or is it that they just could not remember? They had been equally as "dead". Also, the consciousness is obviously much more complex than one may realise.
roger