JANA BUJHA

What Happens To Your Body After Death?

What Happens To Your Body After Death?

What
happens!!! when we die?  There are a lot
of uncertainties in our life but everyone knows that death is only certain. It
affects all of us. If you know more about death it may be easier to think about
it. So let’s know what perhaps happens after death. Out of the situation, six feet
under what happens when we die?

 

At
the start first, things get cold and harsh but we all know complaining about a
crime sounds good. The skin turns purplish gray the signs of the early stages
of decomposition were quite advanced now, to be honest far from the dead a
rotting corpse is crawling with life.

 

 in fact, scientists consider a decomposing
corpse to be a large and complex ecosystem, decomposition begins several
minutes after death with a process called autolysis or, more commonly, auto-digestion soon after.

 

The
heart stops beating the cells are deprived of oxygen and the acidity increases
due to chemical reactions within the enzymes the little things that break us
down are pulled out of the cells. If it usually starts in the liver, which is
rich in enzymes, and finally in the brain, as all the other tissues and organs
begin to break down, damaged blood cells spread, and discoloration of the skin,
it is clear that the temperature body drops precipitously.

 

 

 Until it becomes identical to its environment
again. Then rigor mortis, the rigidity of the eyes of death, the muscles of the
jaw, and the neck stiffen first, but soon the trunk and the limbs are also
victims, but why after death the cells are deprived of their source of energy?

 

 

The
protein particles that move the muscles are blocked at this point most bacteria
live in the corpse of our bodies. There is a large number of bacteria in each
of the organs of the body.

 

A
bacterial community can be found living on surfaces and in crevices, but the
majority of these microscopic organisms are found in our guts. If we know
little about the environment of a living body, we know even less about a corpse
anyway, most of the internal organs are free of germs When we are alive because
our immune system protects all tissues after death the immune system kicks in.

 

 So bacteria roam freely in the organs. There’s
a research center at Huntsville that placed two fresh corpses in the sun to
observe natural decomposition. At this stage, the blue-gray loose skin of one
body is intact, but its intestinal muscles have broken and ribs are visible a
few feet away, another completely skeletal ethos with its hardened skin is
found and black.

 

Once
self-digestion is underway and bacteria have begun to escape from the intestine
a p process called putrefaction begins. 
This is also called molecular death and is basically the breakdown of
soft tissue into gaseous liquids and salts, This already occurs in the early
stages but increases when anaerobic bacteria come into play and anaerobic
bacteria are those who lack oxygen.

 

They
feed on body tissues by fermenting the sugars they contain to produce gases
like methane and ammonia. This causes bloating and a rancid corpse odor.

 

How
do we know what the smell is? Green, and black, but the swelling is often used
as a marker of transition between early and later stages of decay, once
putrefaction sets in a decaying body are exposed to its environment.

 

At
this stage these colonies of microbes are really two species closely related to
decomposition begin to thrive carcasses of blow flies and blow flies give off a
foul odor the flies pick up the smell then land on the carcass and deposit the
rings each fly lays about 250 eggs in the first 24 hours they hatch into small
worms which they feed on and grow into large ones which fly away the presence
of flies is what really cooks the body of the goose attracting predators such
as beetles from the wasp skin and spiders which then feed on fly eggs, if
that’s not bad enough vultures can also descend on the body’s.

 

 

 So each corpse has a unique environment around
them and this can change depending on the state of the body. Studying this very
particular science could allow us to know more about how and when the corpse
really died. Victim of a specific geographical location, this would probably
cause minor cell killers now, in a bizarre plot, you will understand that
humans are not only destroying this planet but can also benefit it through a
process called purging, which is basically liquid leaking from the decaying
body on the floor.

 

 

If
you sent drones out to detect which fields would be best for planting seeds,
they would mark every time a corpse remains a rotting body that dramatically
changes the chemistry of the soil below.


 Read…………….

  • How many days can a man alive if he drinks only water?

 

Causing
effects that can persists for years the purge releases nutrients into the
underlying soil and the migration of a magnet transfers much of a body’s energy
to the surrounding environment according to a very popular estimate an average
body consists of more than 75 water per kilogram of body mass drought
eventually releases nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, and magnesium into the
soil.

 

 

 If we had a more detailed understanding of
these releases it would help medical investigators legally to estimate how long a
body has been placed in a very old grave for our friends who watch corpses rot
to earn a dry and unrelenting life.

 

 

The
skin quickly loses all of its water content so that it remains attached to the
bones and does not fall off when decomposition is in progress. The speed of the
chemical reactions involved is doubled. For every 10 degrees Celsius rise in
temperature, the corpse will reach the advanced stage very quickly, perhaps
after only 16 days, by which time most of the flushing has been removed and the
mass migration of the worm has begun.

 

How
to forget the Egyptians? Whenever we talk about mummies, the ancient Egyptians
learned how the environment affects decomposition before building tombs called
pyramids, they would be fascinated.

 

They
used to simply wrap their dead in sheets and bury them in the sand. The heat
stopped the microbial activity and the leaf prevented the worms from eating.

 

This
kept the body preserved. They wanted to go further and built elaborate tombs
which had the opposite effect when the bodies were taken out of the heat the
microbes started to work so embalming was created. Embalming involves treating
the body with chemicals that slow down the process of decomposition.

What Happens To Your Body After Death?

This
is the process if you want to have the body of the deceased washed with palm
wine and Nile water remove most of the internal organs through the incision
made on the left side and fill the void with natron, a salt found in the Nile
Valley, use a long hook to remove the brain through the nostrils, then cover
the body with natron and leave it alone for 40 days in Egypt, initially, the
dried organs were placed in jars which were buried next to the body, back to
the body after being covered with linen.

 

Finally,
the body itself was wrapped in several layers of linen in preparation for
burial. Funeral directors have studied this process by now, but their process
is a little different, but why do people do this?

 

They
do something similar so their loved ones can see the body as the person. As was
especially the case with victims of trauma and violent death, this may involve
extreme facial reconstruction this is a scenario of an undertaker at work the
undertaker transfers John to the prep table removes his clothes and puts it on
then takes several small vials of embalming fluid from a wall cupboard the
fluid contains a mixture of solvents which is said to temporarily preserve body
tissues how does embalming fluid actually bind proteins together?

 

 

 It fixes them in place and also kills the
bacteria to prevent them from entering the bloodstream so the bacteria can’t
break down the proteins the mortar would actually pour the embalming fluid into
the embalming machine the fluid comes up in a variety of different colors to
match different skin tones so that the body is spongy and an incision is made
just above the left collarbone the undertaker lifts the very fine artery and
vein in the neck and ties them with wires.

 

 

 A thin tube is inserted into the artery and
the vein is opened by a pair of surgical forceps, of course, this is a delicate
process so all the tools are surgical. The embalming machine is then turned on,
which pumps fluid through the body as fluid enters, and blood exits the cut
initially made.

 

 

 Runs down the table into a large sink, this is
also done on purpose, as the blood is to be replaced with embalming fluid,
while the body is massaged to move along any blood.  who can stop the flow of embalming fluid once
all the blood has been replaced, the undertaker pushes a vacuum into John’s
abdomen and sucks the fluid out of the body cavity along with the urine and any
feces that may still be there finally the incisions are sewn up and the body is
cleaned.

 

 

Finally,
we can think and estimate after-death time. We discuss according to science and
research. But The opinion of science is changeable. Which is true for today but
will be false for the next day. So the Final quote is, our creator/ god knows
well what will be…..

 

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