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- From: tsf+@cs.cmu.edu (Timothy Freeman)
- Newsgroups: sci.cryonics,news.answers
- Subject: Cryonics FAQ 2: Science/Technology
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions
- and their answers about cryonics, the practice of carefully preserving
- very recently clinically and legally dead people in hopes that they can be
- revived in the future. It should be read
- Message-ID: <part2_725877379@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: 1 Jan 93 08:36:30 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cs.part2_725877379
- Expires: Sun, 14 Feb 1993 08:36:19 GMT
- References: <part1_725877379@cs.cmu.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.cmu.edu (Usenet News System)
- Followup-To: sci.cryonics
- Organization: School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon
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-
- Archive-name: cryonics-faq/part2
-
- Section 2: Science/Technology
-
- (You can fetch cryomsg "n" by sending mail to kqb@whscad1.att.com or
- to kevin.q.brown@att.com with the subject line "CRYOMSG n". The index
- to this FAQ list is cryomsg "0018.1".)
-
- 2-1. Has anyone been successfully revived from cryonic suspension?
-
- No. Fortunately, successful cryonics is a two-step process:
- (1) put the patient in suspension and
- (2) revive the patient from suspension
- For cryonic suspension to be worthwhile, we only need to master
- step (1) right now and have reasonable expectation that we might
- master step (2) later.
-
- 2-2. What advances need to be made before people frozen now have a chance
- of being revived?
-
- A number of advances in basic areas of research such as medicine,
- microbiology, engineering, and information sciences are required
- before any serious attempt can be made to revive patients suspended
- with current technology. Nanotechnology, the design and fabrication
- of molecular scale machines, is an emerging technology that will
- probably be both necessary and sufficient for revival.
-
- 2-3. Is there any government or university supported research on cryonics
- specifically?
-
- There was suspended animation research sponsored by NASA as late as
- 1979 at the University of Louisville, Kentucky.
-
- 2-4. What is the procedure for freezing people?
-
- Read an account of a cryonic suspension. Briefly, circulation is
- restored by CPR, and the blood is replaced by other substances that
- prevent blood clots and bacteria growth and decrease freezing damage.
- As this happens the body is cooled as quickly as possible to slightly
- above 0 degrees C. After the blood has been replaced the body is
- cooled more slowly to liquid nitrogen temperatures.
-
- 2-5. How can one get a more detailed account of a suspension?
-
- Cryomsgs 601 and 602 is The Transport of Patient A-1312 (28K bytes)
- and cryomsgs 696, 697, and 698 are The Neurosuspension of Patient
- A-1260. (35K bytes). These messages give a first-hand description
- of the initial stages of two suspensions.
-
- 2-6. Is there damage from oxygen deprivation during a suspension?
-
- Not if the suspension happens under good circumstances. One of the
- big goals of the suspension procedure is to get the HLR machine onto
- the patient as soon as possible, to prevent this damage. The
- barbiturates they give reduce brain metabolism, as does cooling. In a
- well done suspension, the damage from oxygen deprivation should be
- minor. In a more perfect world, the suspension procedure would be
- able to start before legal death, which should reduce the damage from
- ischemia even more because there wouldn't be any time when the
- heart is stopped and the body is warm.
-
- 2-7. Do memories require an ongoing metabolism to support them, like RAM in
- a computer?
-
- Not long term memories. When children nearly drown in cold water,
- they can often be revived after having no apparent metabolism and
- still have their memories. Likewise large doses of barbiturates can
- suppress all measurable brain waves without destroying long term
- memories.
-
- 2-8. If these frozen people are revived, will it be easy to cure them of
- whatever disease made them clinically die?
-
- Repairing the freezing damage looks much harder than curing any
- existing disease, so if revival is possible then curing the disease
- ought to be trivial. This doesn't include diseases that lose
- information in the brain, such as Alzheimer's, mental retardation, or
- brain tumors; in these cases, even if the disease were cured and the
- person revived, the problem of replacing the lost information looks
- hard.
-
- 2-9. If I'm frozen and then successfully revived, will my body be old?
-
- No. Old age is a disease that ought to be easier to cure than the
- freezing damage.
-
- 2-10. Why is freezing in liquid nitrogen better than other kinds of
- preservation, such as drying or embalming?
-
- Straightforward chemical arguments lead to the conclusion that
- significant amounts of decomposition do not occur at liquid nitrogen
- temperatures. (See Hugh Hixon's article "How Cold Is Cold Enough?"
- from *Cryonics* magazine, January, 1985, or fetch cryomsg 0015.)
- This isn't true for either dried or embalmed tissue kept at room
- temperature.
-
- Also, Alcor and Trans Time have done experiments with dogs that
- demonstrate that part of the suspension process does not cause
- damage. Dogs have been anesthetized, perfused with a blood
- substitute, and cooled to slightly above 0 C for several hours.
- After rewarming and replacing the original blood, the dogs revived
- with no obvious brain damage. Experiments like this cannot be done
- with drying or embalming.
-
- Another option that may become possible in the future is vitrification.
-
- 2-11. What is vitrification?
-
- (Next paragraph copied from CRYOMSG 6)
-
- The cover article of the Aug. 29, 1987 issue of Science News describes
- vitrification, which achieves cooling to a glassy state without the
- water crystallizing into ice. The advantage of this is that the cells
- do not suffer the mechanical damage from the crystallization. The
- main disadvantage is that the concentration of cryoprotectants
- required to achieve this is toxic. It is also, currently, a
- technically difficult and expensive process requiring computer control
- of cooling rates, perfusion, etc. The March, 1988 issue of Cryonics
- magazine ("The Future of Medicine", Part 2 of 2) suggests that
- vitrification may not be needed for ordinary organ banking, since
- other, cheaper methods may be good enough. For tissues and cells,
- though, it has a lot of promise for the commercial market. Thus,
- commercial research into vitrification may stop short of what is
- needed for making it viable for preservation of large organs or whole
- bodies required by cryonics.
-
- 2-12. How is the baboon? Did it live? Any brain damage?
-
- According to Art Quaife as of 14 Jul 92, the baboon is well and has
- no signs of brain damage.
-
- This is part of what CRYOMSG 865 has to say about the baboon:
-
- Berkeley, California, May 29 1992. BioTime Inc. has, for the first
- time, successfully revived a baboon following a procedure in which
- the animal's deep body temperature was lowered to near-freezing and
- its blood was replaced with BioTime's patent-pending blood-
- substitute solution.
-
- The animal was anesthetized, immersed in ice and cooled to below 2
- degrees Celsius, using the BioTime solution with cardiopulmonary
- bypass procedures. After being bloodless and below 10 degrees
- Centigrade for 55 minutes, the animal was rewarmed and revived. The
- baboon is presently under study by BioTime scientists to determine any
- long-term physical effects.
-
- The company intends to conduct further experiments on primates, using
- its blood-substitute solutions.
-
- 2-13. Who has successfully kept dogs cold for hours? Did they survive? Any
- brain damage?
-
- Several people have achieved that. The first cryonics organization to
- do so was Alcor, in the mid 1980's. For example, the Jan. 1986 issue
- of Cryonics magazine describes, in the article "Dixie's Rebirthday", a
- German Shepherd dog named Dixie who "experienced the privilege (and
- the peril) of having all her blood washed out and replaced with a
- synthetic solution and then being cooled to 4 C. For four hours she
- was held at this temperature: stiff, cold, with eyes flattened out,
- brain waves stopped, and heart stilled. Then, she was reperfused with
- blood, warmed up and restored to life and health." She made a total
- recovery. Several variations, with different perfusates and slightly
- different temperatures and/or times were also performed by Alcor.
- Later, ACS performed a similar experiment on a beagle named Miles and
- recently (1992) BioTime successfully cooled and revived a baboon.
-
- In comparison, hypothermic cardiac surgery was pioneered on humans
- decades ago, although the temperatures used were not nearly as low as
- in the dog experiments above. More recently, the October 1988 issue
- of The Immortalist described successful surgery on a brain aneurysm in
- which the patient was cooled to 15 C for almost an hour. During that
- time the patient's blood remained drained from the body, there was no
- respiration, the heart did not beat, and the brain barely functioned.
-
- 2-14. Who froze the roundworms? What happened?
-
- (This text is quoted from CRYOMSG 790)
-
- Gerry Arthus, our New York Coordinator, has announced preliminary
- results of an experiment which was designed to investigate whether
- memories will survive cryonic suspension.
-
- For his experiment, Gerry used Caenorhabditis elegans, a nematode
- (tiny worm) that's one of the simplest living creatures. It has a
- complete nervous system, however, and can be "trained" in a
- rudimentary way. Worms that are raised in a warm environment will
- "remember" it and will prefer it if they are given the choice.
- Conversely, worms that were raised in a cooler area will tend to
- prefer that environment.
-
- Gerry placed a small number of worms in a cryoprotective solution and
- froze them to -80 degrees Celsius for two hours. After he revived the
- worms, the ones that survived the experience still "remembered" their
- former environmental preferences. So far as we know, this is the
- world's first experiment designed to verify that memory is chemically
- encoded and will survive the freezing process.
-
- The sample that Gerry used is too small to prove anything
- conclusively. Soon, however, Gerry hopes to repeat the experiment with
- a larger sample. He also intends to devise tests to eliminate the
- possibility that the worms changed physiologically to adapt themselves
- to warmer or cooler environments.
-
- 2-15. What were the circumstances under which cat brains produced
- normal-looking brain waves after being frozen?
-
- This was reported by I. Suda and A.C. Kito in Nature, 212, 268-270 (1966).
- The cat brains were perfused with 15% glycerol and cooled to -20 C
- for five days and, upon rewarming and perfusion with fresh blood,
- showed normal brain function (as measured by EEG). Since this experiment
- was done so long ago, and technology has improved considerably since
- then, there is some interest in redoing these experiments to see how
- well we can do now.
-
- The April 1992 Cryonics, volume 13 number 4 page 4, talks more about
- this and gives more references. Appendix B of CRFT talks about the
- plausibility of repair in general.
-
- 2-16. Would it be possible to use some improvement on modern CAT or MRI
- scanners to infer enough about the structure of a brain to reconstruct
- the memories and personality?
-
- This was discussed on the cryonics mailing list some time back. The
- conclusion was that using radiation to infer the structure of the
- neurons in a brain in a reasonable amount of time would require enough
- radiation to vaporize that brain. Then the discussion moved on to
- nuclear-bomb x-ray holography devices in outer space that record the
- results on film that has to be moving by at an astronomical speed so
- it doesn't get caught in the blast. Cremation and immortality, all in
- one convenient package. I find nanotechnology-based approaches more
- believable, albeit less spectacular.
-
- To read about this yourself, fetch articles from the cryonet archive
- with the words "brain scan" in the subject. There are 18 as of July
- 30, 1992. See the "What is a cryomsg?" question below.
-