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  2. Hypothermia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypothermia

    Hypothermia is defined as a body core temperature below 35.0 °C (95.0 °F) in humans. [2] Symptoms depend on the temperature. In mild hypothermia, there is shivering and mental confusion.

  3. Stages of human death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stages_of_human_death

    Technique: Body cooling (measure body cooling to estimate time since death) Pigs: stages of body cooling after death. In pigs, the decrease in body temperature occurs in the eyeball, orbit soft tissue, rectum, and muscle tissue. [29] Up to 13 hours after death, eyeball cooling in pigs provides a reasonable estimate of time since death. [30]

  4. Terminal lucidity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_lucidity

    Terminal lucidity (also known as rallying, terminal rally, the rally, end-of-life-experience, energy surge, the surge, or pre-mortem surge) [1] is an unexpected return of consciousness, mental clarity or memory shortly before death in individuals with severe psychiatric or neurological disorders.

  5. ‘I Thought I Had Chronic Fatigue. Then, Doctors Said I Had 90 ...

    www.aol.com/thought-had-chronic-fatigue-then...

    He then explained that it was caused by autoimmune hepatitis, a chronic liver disease when the body’s immune system attacks the liver cells. The rare condition affects between four and 43 out of ...

  6. What are death cap mushrooms and why are they so deadly ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/death-cap-mushrooms-why...

    Symptoms can be a little tricky to decipher at first. "It causes general gastrointestinal distress," Pringle says. "That's the rough thing about death cap poisoning."

  7. Clinical death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clinical_death

    The prognosis is improved if clinical death is caused by hypothermia rather than occurring prior to it; in 1999, 29-year-old Swedish woman Anna Bågenholm spent 80 minutes trapped in ice and survived with a near full recovery from a 13.7 °C core body temperature. It is said in emergency medicine that "nobody is dead until they are warm and dead."

  8. Cadaveric spasm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadaveric_spasm

    Cadaveric spasm is seen in cases of drowning victims when grass, weeds, roots or other materials are clutched, and provides evidence of life at the time of entry into the water. Cadaveric spasm often crystallizes the last activity one did before death and is therefore significant in forensic investigations, e.g. holding onto a knife tightly. [4]

  9. 70 Innocent Symptoms That Led To Alarming Medical Diagnoses - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/70-times-people-didn-t...

    The post 70 Innocent Symptoms That Led To Alarming Medical Diagnoses first appeared on Bored Panda. But for these people, they turned out to be symptoms of a much more severe illness.