For nearly five years, an elderly woman with advanced Alzheimer’s disease hadn’t spoken.
Then, one afternoon, while lying in bed surrounded by her two daughters and granddaughter, she suddenly became lucid.
For almost two hours, she carried on what witnesses described as a perfectly ordinary conversation. She spoke openly about her fear of dying, discussed disagreements she had with the church and asked after relatives she hadn’t recognized in years.
Later that evening, she died.
Her story was extraordinary. But it was far from unique.
For generations, caregivers, doctors and hospice workers have described similarly bewildering moments: people who appeared lost to dementia suddenly recognizing loved ones, recalling long–forgotten memories and speaking with remarkable clarity in the final hours or days of life.
The episodes were deeply meaningful to the families who witnessed them, yet they occupied an unusual place in medicine. Physicians occasionally documented them. Hospice nurses recognized them. Caregivers quietly shared stories with one another.
Despite appearing in medical literature for more than a century, however, the phenomenon had no agreed–upon name, no standardized definition and almost no scientific research devoted to understanding why it happened.
That changed in 2009, when German biologist Dr Michael Nahm and psychiatrist Dr. Bruce Greyson introduced the scientific term terminal lucidity, giving researchers a common language to investigate one of the most mysterious experiences reported at the end of life.
More than 15 years later, researchers are still trying to understand how people who appear lost to advanced dementia can suddenly recognize loved ones, recall long–forgotten memories and hold coherent conversations shortly before death.
German biologist Dr. Michael Nahm helped introduce the scientific term ‘terminal lucidity’ in 2009 after uncovering decades of historical medical reports describing similar end–of–life experiences
People with advanced Alzheimer’s disease have occasionally been reported to suddenly recognize loved ones, recall long–forgotten memories and hold coherent conversations shortly before death in a phenomenon known as terminal lucidity
Searching for rare exceptions
For Nahm, the journey into terminal lucidity didn’t begin in medicine.
Trained as a biologist, his work has long centered on life’s biggest unanswered questions: how consciousness arises, how life began and what happens at the boundaries of human experience.
‘It’s not the conventional stuff that teaches you the most important issues,’ Nahm said. ‘It’s those rare exceptions from the rule where you may find some windows opening into previously under–researched areas.’
That fascination with life’s outliers eventually led him to nineteenth–century medical journals, where he kept encountering the same puzzling accounts.
Again and again, physicians described dying patients who unexpectedly regained mental clarity shortly before death. Some recognized loved ones they had long forgotten. Others carried on coherent conversations after months or even years of silence.
The reports stretched across decades and countries, yet no one had attempted to study them systematically.
‘People report about this amazing phenomenon,’ Nahm said. ‘But there’s no name and no research on it.’
That realization prompted Nahm and Greyson to coin the term terminal lucidity, giving researchers a shared language to investigate a phenomenon that had long existed only in scattered case reports.
Researchers hope studying terminal lucidity could reveal new clues about memory, consciousness and future dementia treatments
A distinction that matters
As interest in the phenomenon has grown, one misconception has continued to frustrate Nahm.
Researchers often use the terms terminal lucidity and paradoxical lucidity interchangeably.
He argues they are not the same.
Terminal lucidity refers to when an episode occurs: an unexpected return of mental clarity shortly before death.
Paradoxical lucidity refers to who experiences it: someone whose brain has been so severely damaged that coherent thought should, according to current medical understanding, be impossible.
‘Terminal lucidity is terminal because it’s always related to dying,’ Nahm explained. ‘Paradoxical lucidity is called paradoxical because it always occurs in people with a severely damaged brain.’
The distinction may sound technical, but Nahm said he believes it is essential if researchers hope to understand what is actually happening.
The two sometimes overlap. Someone with advanced Alzheimer’s disease who suddenly becomes lucid in the final hours of life may experience both terminal and paradoxical lucidity.
But they are not synonymous.
A patient with severe dementia who becomes lucid months before death would be experiencing paradoxical lucidity, not terminal lucidity.
Conversely, someone dying of cancer without structural brain damage who suddenly becomes mentally clear shortly before death would experience terminal lucidity, but not paradoxical lucidity.
Nahm later formalized that distinction in a 2022 paper, arguing that researchers should reserve the terms for separate concepts to avoid confusion as the field grows.
‘It’s really important to distinguish,’ he said.
The phenomenon remained largely unexplained for more than a century before researchers began formally studying it in 2009
More than just a ‘good day’
One question families often ask is whether terminal lucidity is simply a particularly good day.
Nahm says the difference is usually unmistakable.
Unlike the natural fluctuations often seen in Alzheimer’s disease, terminal lucidity is sudden, dramatic and unexpected.
‘It’s really pronounced,’ he said. ‘People are really going, ‘What’s happening now? This is unusual.”
Some families are so astonished that they instinctively begin recording the moment on their phones.
Even so, defining exactly what separates an ordinary cognitive fluctuation from a genuine episode of terminal lucidity remains one of the field’s biggest challenges.
There is still no universally accepted medical definition or diagnostic criteria.
Instead, Nahm said he believes researchers need something similar to the standardized scales used to study near–death experiences: a scoring system that could objectively evaluate the characteristics of each episode and help distinguish true terminal lucidity from routine cognitive fluctuations.
‘Scientists always like to have these boxes,’ he said. ‘But that’s often not how real life works.’
Could terminal lucidity unlock new treatments?
For Nahm, the scientific importance of terminal lucidity extends far beyond satisfying curiosity.
If researchers can determine what briefly restores cognition at the end of life, they may uncover entirely new ways of treating dementia.
One possibility, he said, is that the memories aren’t actually gone.
‘They may still be there,’ Nahm said, ‘even though they’re usually not accessible.’
If scientists can identify what temporarily restores access to those memories, whether through changes in brain activity, electrical signaling or another neurological process, they may one day be able to replicate it.
‘If we could find this new kind of therapy,’ he said, ‘this would be very, very important.’
Not all neurologists, however, are convinced terminal lucidity points toward an entirely new understanding of dementia.
Such a breakthrough could transform dementia care.
But before scientists can develop new treatments, they first have to answer a more fundamental question: what is happening inside the brain during these extraordinary moments?
Researchers say the phenomenon is prompting doctors and caregivers to rethink how they treat people with advanced dementia
A possible explanation inside the brain
Dr. Ronald Petersen, a Mayo Clinic neurologist who served as director of the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center from 2009 to 2025 and now leads the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, said he believes the answer may lie not in reversing Alzheimer’s disease but in the brain’s arousal systems – the networks responsible for alertness, attention and consciousness.
‘Do I have an explanation? No. Do I have the answer? No,’ Petersen said.
Rather than viewing the episodes as entirely separate from known brain function, Petersen said he believes they may be linked to the same brain mechanisms behind the cognitive fluctuations seen in some forms of dementia.
Petersen explained that people with dementia with Lewy bodies – a type of dementia that causes dramatic swings in alertness, attention and thinking – can appear profoundly confused one day and much more mentally present the next.
‘Somebody [with Lewy bodies] will be quite confused one day… and then the next day look pretty normal. I think, from a physiologic anatomic perspective, it pertains to those arousal mechanisms in the brain that are up and down. When they get fired up, then the person’s brain can function relatively normally.’
That theory may also explain why some patients appear able to recall long–forgotten memories.
Petersen said memories are not stored in a single location but across vast networks throughout the brain.
‘They’re not like a book in a library on a shelf,’ he said.
Instead, memories formed decades before Alzheimer’s damaged the brain may still exist but become difficult to retrieve.
‘Something 20 or 30 years ago, when your brain was working well, those may very well be accessible,’ Petersen said. ‘If those arousal mechanisms are reactivated, they may be able to access some of these memory networks that are still in place.’
Petersen cautioned that the most dramatic reports remain rare and said families’ interpretations may not always match a physician’s assessment.
‘With all due respect, there’s some subjective interpretation of these events by the observers too,’ he said.
Dr Ronald Petersen said he believes terminal lucidity may be linked to temporary changes in the brain’s arousal systems rather than a reversal of Alzheimer’s disease
The Case He Never Forgot
Among the hundreds of cases Nahm has studied, one has remained particularly vivid.
It involved the grandmother of a physician friend who had advanced Alzheimer’s disease and had not spoken for nearly five years.
Then, one afternoon, while lying in bed surrounded by her two daughters and granddaughter, she suddenly became lucid.
For nearly two hours, she carried on what Nahm described as a perfectly ordinary conversation. She spoke about her fear of dying, discussed disagreements she had with the church and asked after relatives she had not recognized in years.
The sudden transformation was so startling that one of her granddaughters ran from the room in fear.
Later that evening, the woman quietly died.
Nahm says stories like hers illustrate why families should know terminal lucidity exists.
Without that knowledge, many interpret the sudden improvement as recovery.
‘They have the false hope,’ he said. ‘Now everything is getting better.’
New research suggests lucid episodes don’t always signal death and can sometimes occur months before a patient dies (Pictured: Mayo Clinic)
Not always a sign of imminent death
Whether these episodes are actually signs that death is imminent, however, has become one of the biggest questions facing researchers.
Dr Joan Griffin, a social and behavioral scientist at the Mayo Clinic, has spent years interviewing caregivers who witnessed lucid episodes in loved ones with Alzheimer’s disease.
While Nahm helped define terminal lucidity, Griffin has focused on understanding how often these episodes occur, what they look like and what they mean for the families who experience them.
Her findings have challenged one of the field’s longest–held assumptions.
‘I don’t think that they are necessarily harbingers for death,’ Griffin said. ‘Our data is pretty robust now to show that they’re happening months, sometimes six months, sometimes two years before they actually die.’
Rather than one single phenomenon, Griffin found that lucid episodes appear in many different forms.
Some occur shortly before death.
Others happen long beforehand.
Some last only a few minutes.
Others continue for hours, and in rare cases even days.
‘What surprised me is that creating these different types of episodes—it’s not just one,’ she said. ‘It’s not sort of a universal one type of experience. It’s pretty heterogeneous.’
Her team also found that many episodes coincided with family visits, holidays or familiar music.
Griffin is careful not to call those moments triggers.
Relatives may simply have been paying closer attention.
Researchers still cannot predict when a lucid episode will occur, why one patient experiences one while another never does, or what biological process causes it.
Mayo Clinic researcher Dr Joan Griffin studies lucid episodes in Alzheimer’s patients and their lasting impact on caregivers and families
When the researcher became the witness
For Griffin, the work eventually became deeply personal.
Her father–in–law had lived with Alzheimer’s disease for roughly a decade.
Although he could still speak, he had not recognized family members by name for years and relied on a wheelchair to move around.
Then, during a summer visit from Griffin’s brother–in–law, something remarkable happened.
The 97–year–old stood up, grabbed his walker and walked inside the house.
‘He looked at my brother–in–law and said, ‘Oh, hey Bob, what are you doing here?” Griffin recalled.
The family managed to capture the moment on video.
‘I couldn’t believe it,’ she said. ‘I was in the middle of my research, and I remember thinking, ‘I can’t believe I’m witnessing what I study.”
For many caregivers, Griffin said, those moments become some of their most treasured memories.
‘They’re like, ‘I got them back. They told me they loved me. They expressed joy,” she said. ‘For the most part, they are extremely beautiful stories and very indelible.’
But they can also raise painful questions.
If someone who appeared unable to communicate suddenly recognizes family and expresses coherent thoughts, relatives often wonder whether the person they loved had somehow remained present throughout the disease.
Some feel guilty that they did not spend more time talking to them.
Others wonder whether they should have played more music or recreated whatever circumstances surrounded the episode.
The moments rarely last.
‘They typically return to their baseline state that they were before the episode started,’ Griffin said, ‘and sometimes a little worse because it’s exhausting.’
Her team is now studying whether those experiences make grief easier or more complicated after a loved one dies.
The answer, she suspects, depends on the family.
For many families, these brief moments of clarity provide one last opportunity to reconnect, express love and say goodbye before a loved one dies
Changing how patients are treated
Even without understanding why lucid episodes occur, Griffin said she believes the research has already changed the way caregivers and healthcare professionals should think about people living with advanced dementia.
‘If these episodes can happen, how would you actually treat people differently?’ she said. ‘We have to be able to maintain the dignity and humanity of people throughout their entire illness.’
That means resisting the temptation to talk over patients, ignore them or assume they cannot understand what is happening around them.
‘Don’t forget they’re in the room,’ Griffin said. ‘Because you just don’t know what’s going on.’
Nahm hopes the expanding field will eventually answer the scientific questions that first drew him to the phenomenon.
Although terminal lucidity first came to prominence through Alzheimer’s disease, researchers have since documented similar episodes in people with strokes, brain tumors, psychiatric illnesses and other neurological conditions.
More recent reports have also described cases in children, suggesting the phenomenon may be far broader than originally believed.
‘What I appreciate a lot,’ Nahm said, ‘is the dimension of how broad the phenomenon is.’
When Nahm helped introduce the term terminal lucidity in 2009, he never imagined the subject would become an international area of research.
Today, neurologists, dementia specialists, hospice researchers and caregivers are all contributing to a field that barely existed two decades ago.
The reaction he hears most often remains remarkably simple.
‘They say, ‘I didn’t know there’s a name for it,” Nahm said. ”I didn’t know there’s research on this.”
You must be logged in to post a comment Login