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Msg | Description |
# 9647 | Halperin's proposal [Mike Darwin] |
law is a very touchy one which states in effect "I (the
person making the . . . which is anything but "uniform") in most
states.
Another problem is that solid organ donors, . . . because the preservation time is only 4
hours to 6 hours MAXIMUM. The logistics of transport and the . . . donors are DOAs', people who arrest
shortly AFTER arriving at the hospital and who cannot . . . since most
organs are harvested with many hours or days of notice and with tissue
. . . weeks you can
frequently produce such a state of chimeric tolerance in recipients,
bringing the . . . believe that successful reversible
cryoprerservation of the brain or clinically applied cryopreservation of
the kidney, (Fri, 8 May 1998, 14 KB) |
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# 14245 | Re: #14229 - Where is a current summary? [Paul Wakfer] |
99% of CryoNet postings were busy with brain masturbation, the
following request for information about . . . to a site that summarizes the current
> state-of-the-art.
There is no site . . . itself induced additional unrecoverable damage, and
soon after abandoned the pressure approach.
> It was impossible . . . improved vitrification fluids that by
> themselves leave brain slices ~95 percent functional (not after
> freeze-and-thaw, just after exposure to the fluid.)
No. This has . . . partly because 21CM is not
working with brain slices. That it the research project of . . . measure intercellular
functionality which is crucial for brain tissue.
INC is now trying to garner . . . cellular
viability for rat hippocampal slices even after vitrification and
thawing.
Once that is complete, . . . obtaining propagation of evokes potentials across a brain slice as
outlined in the research proposal . . . Roy
Yowell and additional support in man-hours, particularly from Leonard
Zubkoff, both of whom (Sat, 05 Aug 2000, 12 KB) |
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# 24250 | Oreg'n, Asst'd Suic'de & Hypoth'rmia [RAMole] |
terminal agonies and deterioration of
body and brain, and to die at a known time . . . promptly, and to die of hypothermia so brain deterioration is delayed for 45 minutes
or even several hours, Oregon's Assisted Suicide Law may provide . . . coldness of the water. Within a half hour the water would be cold, and within
an hour or two he'd die of hypothermia, . . . and plenty of time to work before
brain deterioration began.
Details:
Too many cryo patients die, then lie around for hours before they are
discovered to be dead, . . . they die at normal body
temperature, the brain deteriorates beyond recovery by conventional medical technology . . . everyone present, and
to die cold so brain deterioration is delayed for a long time.
. . . out and submitted. (Maybe not submitted
until after death; this part is not clear to . . . minutes. And dies in one to three hours,
usually.
The above fills all requirements except . . . actual Oregon statute at
http://www.leg.state.or.us/ors/127.html
Here is (Tue, 15 Jun 2004, 13 KB) |
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# 4959 | Dendritic spines [Brian Wowk] |
cold ischemia. Mike
acknowledges this when he states that the results do not apply
when . . . phase can subject the patient to many
hours of cold ischemia-- but not the same . . . at
Alcor were able to recover dogs after more than FOUR HOURS
of cold ischemia with no neurological deficits. . . . have since extended
this time beyond SEVEN HOURS. The guinea pig study cited by
Doug Skrecky and Mike Perry would have predicted these brains
would be Alzheimhers-like mush after this (Tue, 10 Oct 1995, 3 KB) |
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# 26065 | [Fwd: [>Htech] [GRG] Mice sent into hibernation-like state by hydrogen [Joseph Bloch] |
Htech] [GRG] Mice sent into hibernation-like state by hydrogen
I saw this posted on . . . preservation
process if this low-oxygen-demand state were initiated in a patient
immediately prior . . . reduce oxygen-loss
related damage to the brain.
Just a notion from a layman.
Joseph
. . . Htech] [GRG] Mice sent into hibernation-like state by
hydrogen sulfide gas (fwd from pestep@ . . . gas go in to a
hibernation-like state, with body temperature dropping and breathing and
. . . can be coaxed into a hibernation-like state by a
whiff of hydrogen sulphide, the . . . Science1.
When re-exposed to clean air after six hours, the mice bounced back
without any evident (Thu, 21 Apr 2005, 6 KB) |
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# 5831 | Re: Death (was Donaldson MR and Miss Hindley) [Brian Wowk] |
frozen stiffs.
>So your corpse 'wakes up' after x years in suspension and finds his
> . . . completely drained,
hearts stopped, bodies cooled, and brains at ZERO activity for up
to an hour. I wonder how they and their families . . . Human beings can and have survived complete brain shutdown
for prolonged periods with no neurological . . . or reverse the injury. If you
restore brain chemistry to its normal state, you get the same person back.
Period.
(25 Feb 96 04:08:35, 3 KB) |
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# 29939 | Re: drying preserves human skin viability [RAMole] |
is thought that vitrification solution used on brains
without opening the blood brain barrier simply dehydrates the brain tissue
and thus prevents ice formation because . . . the Romans and others, until trade declined after 640 AD.
The chemical symbol for sodium, . . . retains cell molecular structure and resumes function after transplantation.
Olszewski WL, Moscicka M, Zolich D. . . . grafts were accepted by recipients. Three
weeks after transplantation, keratinocytes synthesized keratins 10, 16,
and . . . sodium chloride dehydrated
at 240C for 2 hours at room temperature for periods of weeks . . . 6
months and harvested 3-4 weeks after transplantation revealed intensive
incorporation of bromdeoxyuridine (BrdU) . . . Bacterial flora of skin did not change after
grafting. We conclude that human skin can survive in a dehydrated state
in sodium chloride for months and after (Tue, 16 Oct 2007, 7 KB) |
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# 8092 | Re: CryoNet #7998 - #8003 [Thomas Donaldson] |
verify
some or all of my foreign state, not introspectively (as when you do some
. . . many other animals are conscious, too. Their brains must also deal with
making choices. Insects, . . . doubt I could do it in an hour unless that other person already understood
the . . . how close or far the person was.
After all, we didn't learn the idea (Thu, 17 Apr 1997, 6 KB) |
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# 27571 | Uploading Myths, Continued... [rbr] |
philosophical and logical
requirements---not from the state of technological progress.
Therefore, it is not . . . that coffee cup on
the countertop an hour ago.' This statement, and the vast majority
. . . will
continue existence in a spirit world after his death; or that his
'identity' will continue to exist even if his brain is destroyed
and all that survives is (Fri, 3 Feb 2006, 9 KB) |
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# 28168 | Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage [Anthony .] |
From: "Anthony ." <autophagy@gmail.com>
Subject: Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage
Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage
By Dan . . . Fedorenko, knew
what to do: freeze her brain.
"She wanted to extend her life by . . . years," Fedorenko said.
Today, Lidia Ivanovna's brain sits in a metal container in a . . . s first cryonics company
outside the United States, in 2005 so that they and their . . . America, dogs have been frozen for eight hours and revived," said
Potapov, 29, a former . . . cells and revive them."
In the United States, 150 bodies are frozen in cryonic slumber, . . . proud history
in the Soviet Union, which after its fall bequeathed the country's
premier (Tue, 4 Jul 2006, 11 KB) |
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