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Msg  Description
# 28155 [jhughes@changesurfer.com: [>Htech] Russians interested in cryonics] [Eugen Leitl]
  index.php?action_id=2&story_id=18041 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
(Fri, 30 Jun 2006, 12 KB)
# 20005 Agonal Hypoperfusion and Cryonics [Mgdarwin]
  that by the time of > cyropreservation, the brain has already been seriously damaged. We (MD > . . . demise is prolonged hypotension, > which kills the brain (and kidneys) long before death is admitted . . . escape from this doom to a cyropreserved > state, before the irreversible damage is acquired. Obviously . . . but aren't there treatments to prevent > brain damage from prolonged hypotension, such as inducing . . . part of Alcor's > protocol, at least *after* death is pronounced. Do we get better care after > being declared a corpse than before? I . . . of slowly dying cryopatients who experience many hours in deep shock who lose pupillary and
(Fri, 6 Sep 2002, 8 KB)
# 19027 Brain electrics and death [James Bryan Swayze]
  James Bryan Swayze <swayzej@attbi.com> Subject: Brain electrics and death References: <20020506090001.35611.qmail@ . . . how to answer it: > > Upon death, the brain's electrical activity ceases. All information is lost when brain activity ceases, as the electrons which constitute brain activity disperse. How then, upon revival, is someone with an informationless brain to regain the information they lost upon . . . to one dying and being dead for hours even and having one's electrons dispersed ( . . . of people successfully revived and fully themselves after extreme cold water droning death, snow bank . . . involved in making atoms behave as atoms) state of deanimation (death for the uninitiated). Toby,
(Mon, 06 May 2002, 6 KB)
# 15711 Current Alcor Procedures [Hugh Hixon]
  15699, which is reproduced below: The current state of affairs is that Alcor is doing . . . the single organ we consider irreplacable, the brain. Ettinger is correct that the Web site . . . mid-'80s we were routinely recovering dogs after four hours of circulating bloodless (hematocrit <1) perfusion at
(Wed, 21 Feb 2001, 6 KB)
# 8929 humorous cryonics survey - results [Doug Skrecky]
  29 responses. Of these 8 or 28% stated a wish to become a corspicle. I . . . found this to be a rather curious state of affairs, and I am sure there . . . nonissue reanimation must be demonstrated. Question 9 states that cryonics companies will themselves not survive . . . for it, then question 8 becomes moot. After putting on my thinking cap, I could . . . expensive method to introduce cryoprotectant into the brain only. Current cryonic preparations are composed of . . . lower the bed of syringes towards a brain submerged in the cryoprotectant over a period of a few hours. During this time all areas of the
(Fri, 12 Dec 1997, 11 KB)
# 7548 Temperature Monitoring of Cryopatients [Mike Darwin]
  temperature data will not be meaningful until after lavaging has stopped and thermal equilibrium of . . . which persists for 4 to 6 minutes after liquid loading is complete. Continuous sweep flow . . . lavage cooling, the only reliable indicators of brain temperature will be tympanic temperatures and central . . . flow (i.e., lateralized trauma to the brain parenchyma or its vasculature) this reduction in . . . 1-2 minutes, especially during the first hour of CPR and at the start of . . . minutes if possible, especially during the first hour of CPR and at the start of . . . rectal probe in the first minute to hour or so after the lavage in reflecting true core temperature . . . an initial DRP reading should be taken after placement of the probe and inflation of . . . counter at most pharmacies in the United States and Europe. Early use of the Thermoscan
(22 Jan 97 21:55:51, 17 KB)
# 17642 This Week at Alcor [Jessica Lemler]
  operator to be available during regular business hours. Changes to the overall format will make . . . longer valid. Even though it is clearly stated in our contracts, too many members simply . . . t inform us about it until well after thefact. This is inexcusable. I am going . . . over my head! Yes, that is correct, after more than a year of painstaking typing, . . . 555 timer (556 chip) and a solid-state relay. Picked up some pieces for it. . . . to continue Alcor's policy of 24-hour coverage after the live-in staff moves to newly- . . . such as information-bearing structure in the brain. I had a good, short talk with
(Fri, 21 Sep 2001, 16 KB)
# 9640 Scientific Prizes [Christopher M. Rasch]
  ischemic injury, using mouse neuronal cell culture. After graduating, I spent a year performing cryoprotectant . . . that by offering a chance for free brain and/or tissue cryopreservation to organ donors, . . . perceive a lottery ticket to have their brain/tissue cryopreserved to be? Keep in mind, at least initially, the majority of organ donors will have brains severely damaged by many hours or days of ischemic time. For them, . . . cloned. Assuming that perpetual storage of a brain or tissue sample could be reduced to $ . . . you would be able to fund 62 brains, and 100 tissue samples. Assuming that 10, . . . for the best proposal to advance the state of the art for organ cryopreservation. The
(Wed, 06 May 1998, 9 KB)
# 4715 Life Extension Society Newsletter [Keith F. Lynch]
  with pneumonia. Alcor received less than an hour's notice before clinical death, which was . . . 7 molar (measured in effluent from the brain burr hole). This is extraordinary in a no-washout situation after approximately 18 hours of (chilled) ischemia. It is obvious that . . . court will redistribute the assets to meet state legal requirements. Needless to say, such an
(Thu, 3 Aug 1995, 14 KB)
# 0025.2 Can Life Stop and Start Again?
  year, more and more people are saved after long periods of seeming lifelessness. Some may . . . a heartbeat was two-and-a-half hours . . . one person was in cardiac arrest for almost four hours . . . yet everyone fully recovered. How can this . . . the front door. For two or three hours, Brittany was exposed to sub- zero temperatures. . . . ones in the outer layers of her brain were affected first, causing her to lose . . . passed, the cold penetrated deeper and her brain stopped sending impulses to tell her lungs . . . more slowly. And so, for a few hours, she was in a state of suspended animation. Later, when Brittany was
(, 7 KB)

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