but then how come they say - he was already dead for 10 mins and they manage to revive him?...if its up to 3 minutes max....im really confused here
Fair question. I may have been oversimplifying to avoid a very lengthy answer, but I found and article that explains it well.
It's complicated, yo.
Keep that 3 min isn't an absolute, it's an average. Brain death from anoxia can start in less than one minute, and by 5 it's generally complete. The article below states up to 10; I have issues with that. To see what 10 minutes of anoxia-- maybe even
partial oxygen deprivation looks like-- see the thread about the 18 yr old who's mother "saved" him from hanging. He's got about 8 brain cells left.
When you hear, "revived after 10 minutes," my question would be, after 10 minutes of
what? After 10 minutes of cardiac arrythmia, or arrest? After 10 minutes of pulseless electrical activity? After 10 minutes of respiratory arrest? Respiratory
and cardiac arrest?
I think the most notable thing to point out here is that if someone is able to reliably state the number of minutes someone was clinically dead for, they were part of a team working to resuscitate that person. Otherwise, how would they know? CPR was being performed, compressions, respirations, O2, etc. Probably defibrillated (shocked). The works, including fluids and vasoconstrictors in a clinical setting.
The exception (as discussed in the article) are those cases involving severe hypothermia. The stories about people who fall thru thin ice and are successfully brought back 45 minutes later, due to the freezing conditions slowing down their metabolic needs to almost nothing.
This article does an excellent job deliniating the different scenarios as well as postulating different outcomes. My head was swimming with the different factors to consider about halfway thru:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/gizmod...have-to-stop-for-before-you-ca-1457981280/amp