A last-ditch attempt to stave off extinction as Sudan goes on Tinder – Irish Times

Wed, Jun 28, 2017, 22:00 Updated: about 24 hours ago

Sudan, slow, unhappy and torpid as he pads glumly around the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, his retirement home

The love life of Sudan, the last male northern white rhinoceros in the world, is understandably complicated. Currently, it is as slow, unhappy and torpid as he is, padding glumly around the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya, his retirement home.

In Sudan: The Last of the Rhinos (Wednesday, BBC Two, 9pm), he makes for an unlikely celebrity, but extinction can do a lot to raise your profile.

Recently, in an occurrence this nature documentary finds too trivial to mention, Sudan joined Tinder. For a creature with no opposable thumbs, this really seemed like a last throw of the dice for the species. Otherwise, mention of his predicament trends under the hashtag: #lastmalestanding.

Both social media campaign are gloomily ironic, because although there are two remaining females, there is no procreational hope for the once-plentiful African species. It is already extinct. Humans did this, says the biologist Thomas Hildebrant, and humans should correct it.

Directed by Rowan Deacon and prepared to travel the world for its detail, the documentary is unsure whether to proceed with a light step or a heavy heart. It proceeds with biographical cinereel, before building up a dual picture of threat: poachers in an unstable continent on one side, peddling its horn as an aphrodisiac, and safari park rustlers on the other. Sudan was captured by the latter and brought, of all places, to the former Czechoslovakia in 1974.

Repairing to present-day Dvur Kralove, where Josef Vgners zoo once held seven white rhinos, family and staff recall the animals passivity in captivity. I guess they had no choice, says one keeper. If anything, though, Sudan himself had grown violently disturbed; refusing to mate, attacking the females and killing one of his keepers. Once again, though, its the humans who take the blame.

Even before we follow the international efforts to revive the species by flying Sudan to Garamba Make love and multiply, instructs a Czech politician, with an ill-fitting levity that informs much of the programme. You are not tourists. the programmes focus shifts to human efforts. Cryonics, gamete harvesting, surrogate species and artificial insemination will play a more significant role in re-starting the northern white rhino than Sudan will.

Its morally incumbent on us to try to make this happen, says Hildebrandt. The programme wishes it had better news on that front a breakthrough is hoped for this year but so far nothing. It ends then, not as a lament for a celebrity rhino and his species, but as a study in human endeavours, whether perverse and ruinous, or shame-faced and progressive.

The northern white rhino is extinct, it knows, but were the ones who are threatened.

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A last-ditch attempt to stave off extinction as Sudan goes on Tinder - Irish Times

The plan to ‘reawaken’ cryogenically frozen brains and transplant them into someone else’s skull – National Post

Sergio Canavero, the Italian surgeon who audaciously plans to perform the worlds first human head transplant within the next 10 months (pending the availability of a donor body) is now preparing to reawaken cryogenically frozen brains and transplant them into someone elses skull.

In an interview with a German-language magazine, Canavero says he will attempt to bring the first brainsfrozen in liquid nitrogen at an Arizona-based cryogenics bank back to life not in 100 years, but three years at the latest.

Transplanting a brain only and not an entire head gets around formidable rejection issues, Canavero said, sincethere will be no need to reconnect and stitch up severed vessels, nerves, tendons and muscles as there is when a new head is fused onto abrain-dead donor body.

Canavero allows that one problematic issue with brain transplants, however, would be that no aspect of your original external body remains the same.

Your head is no longer there, your brain is transplanted into an entirely different skull, he told OOOM magazine, published by the same company that handles the Italian brain surgeonspublic relations.

The flamboyant neuroscientist who some ethicists have decried as nuts rattled the transplant world when he first outlined his plans for a human head transplant two years ago in the journal, Surgical Neurology International.

Bioethicist Arthur Caplan called Canaveros latest proposal to merge head transplants with resurrecting the frozen dead beyond ridiculous. People have their own doubts about whether anything can be salvaged from these frozen heads or bodies because of the damage freezing does, said Caplan, head of ethics at NYU Langone Medical Centre in New York City.

Then saying that he has some technique for making this happen, that has never been demonstrated in frozen animals, is absurd.

Caplan accused the maverick surgeon of playing to peoples fantasies, that somehow you can come back from death, fantasies that you can live forever if you just keep moving your head around and to fears science is out of control. Thats why I pay attention to him.

According to Canavero, the greatest technical hurdle to a head transplant is fusing the donor and recipients severed spinal cords, something never before achieved in humans, and restoring function, without causing massive, irreversible brain damage or death.

In an exclusive interview with the National Post last year, Canavero said what makeshisbrazen, and critics say ethically reckless, protocolpossible isa special fusogen, a waxy, glue-like substance developed by a young B.C.-born chemist that will be used to reconnect the severed spinal cord stumps and coax axons and neurons to regrow across the gap.

Canavero said the first head transplant will be performed in Harbin, China, and the surgical team led by Xiaoping Ren, a Chinese orthopedic surgeon who participated in the first hand transplant in the U.S. in 1999. Ren has been performing hundreds of head transplants in mice in preparation.

The first patient will be an unidentified Chinese citizen, and not, as originally planned, Valery Spiridonov, a 31-year-old Russian man who suffers from a rare and devastating form of spinal muscular dystrophy.

Canavero called Ren a close friend of mine and an extraordinarily capable surgeon.

At the moment, I can only disclose that there has been massive progress in medical experiments that would have seemed impossible even as recently as a few months ago, Canavero told OOOM. The milestones that have been reached will undoubtedly revolutionize medicine.

He declined to offer up exactly what those milestones are, saying that results of the most recent animal experimentshave been submitted for publication in renowned scientific medical journals.

Last September, the team reported they had succeeded in restoring functionality and mobility in mice with severed spinal cords using the special fusogen, dubbed Texas-PEG. Canavero claims the mice were able to run again.

Your head is no longer there, your brain is transplanted into an entirely different skull

He said numerous experiments have been conducted since then on an array of different animals in South Korea and China and the results are unambiguous: the spinal cord and with it the ability to move can be entirely restored, he told OOOM.

Canavero envisions the head (or, perhaps more accurately, body) grafting venture as a cure for people living with horrible medical conditions. The plan is to cut off the head of two people one, the recipient, the other, the donor whose brain is dead but whose body is otherwise healthy, an accident victim for example. Surgeons will then shift the recipients head onto the donor body using a custom-made swivel crane. They will have less than an hour to re-establish blood supply before risking irreversible brain damage.

In a few months we will sever a body from a head in an unprecedented medical procedure, Canavero said. At the moment of decapitation, the patient will be clinically dead. If we bring this person back to life, we will receive the first real account of what actually happens after death, he told the magazine, meaning, he said, whether there is an afterlife, a heaven, a hereafter or whatever you may want to call it or whether death is simply a flicking off of the light switch and thats it.

Canavero said a brain transplant has several advantages over a head-swap, including that there is barely any immune reaction, which means the problem of rejection does not exist. The brain is, in a manner of speaking, a neutral organ, he said.

Others are hugely skeptical of the prospect of reawakening brains, or bodies, frozen after death. In an interview with the Posts Joe OConnor two years ago, Eike-Henner Kluge, a bio-ethicist at the University of Victoria, refers to cryonics patients as corpsesicles.

Unless it is technically possible, and it is not, to replace all the water left in a bodys cells with glycol, unfreezing a frozen corpse will rupture the cell walls ensuring that you are mush a corpsesicle.

However, two years ago researchers with 21st Century Medicine, a California cryobiology research company, reported they had succeeded in freezing a rabbits brain using a flash-freezing technique to protect and stabilize the tissue. After the vitrified brains were rewarmed, electron microscope imaging from across the rabbit brains showed neurons and synapses were crisp and intact.

Canavero hopesto get his first brains from Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz. Alcors most famous patient is Red Sox baseball legend Ted Williams, the greatest hitter in baseball history, whose head was detached from his body and cryopreserved after his death at 83 in 2002.

Email: skirkey@nationalpost.com | Twitter:

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The plan to 'reawaken' cryogenically frozen brains and transplant them into someone else's skull - National Post

Thirty years since its launch, Athens Photo Festival is ‘still searching’ – Kathimerini

Reconstruction, a project by Greek photographer Kosmas Pavlidis, explores the boundaries between documentation and fiction. The photograps that make up the project were taken over the course of six years.

This years Athens Photo Festival, spread across two floors of the Benaki Museums Pireos Street annex, provides insights into developments in contemporary international photography by bringing together the work of 85 photographers and other artists from 30 countries who are known for exploring photographic techniques in their work.

The show, now in its 30th year, also explores the evolution of the medium and the adoption of new techniques, as well as the growing relationship between photography and other art forms.

About 2,000 photographers submitted work following an open call for this years event, whose rather abstract title is Still Searching. After reviewing the proposals, the curators set up an exhibition that is divided into eight sections.

Among the highlights that are on display are Murray Ballards Prospect of Immortality, an investigation of cryonics the process of freezing a human body after death in the hope that scientific advances may one day bring him or her back to life.

The 34-year-olds project can be found in the section of the show titled Fluid Body.

In the same section, visitors can also see Lilly Lulays Liquid Portrait a photographic portrait that consists of a sculpture and a moving collage both sourcing visual content from a single Facebook account.

In the section Role Play, Luisa Whitton showcases part of her What About the Heart? project. Whitton, who has been selected as one of Magnums Top 30 Under 30, explores the relationship between humans and machines.

Among the festivals side events are portfolio reviews, projections, seminars, family labs and the established Athens Photo Marathon. Dates will be announced in the coming days.

The Athens Photo Festival runs through July 30 at the Benaki Museum (138 Pireos). For more information log into http://www.benaki.gr

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Thirty years since its launch, Athens Photo Festival is 'still searching' - Kathimerini

The confounding world of Cryonics, and the Kiwi scientists trying to … – Stuff.co.nz

NICOLE LAWTON

Last updated05:00, June 18 2017

CHRIS MCKEEN/FAIRFAX NZ

Stem cells, skin, red blood cells and platelets are all frozen in liquid nitrogen freezer at the New Zealand Blood Service for later use - but not whole bodies.

Cryonics, the practice of deep-freezing bodies, remains a controversial area of research with many scientists in New Zealand reluctant to wade into the freezer.

Not surprisingly, the art of filling the deceased with antifreeze, suspending them in liquid nitrogen in the vain hopes that scientific break-throughs will one day reanimate them and cure them isnot an accepted academic discipline New Zealand, and therefore isn't pursued in any official capacity.

But that hasn't stopped a few individuals from trying.

CHRIS MCKEEN/FAIRFAX NZ

Dr Richard Charlewood, is the medical director of the national tissue bank, run by the New Zealand Blood Service.

Two New Zealand foundations -The Foundation for Anti-aging Research and the Foundation for Reversal of Solid State Hypothermia - were given the cold shoulder in 2013 when applying to be considered a charity from the Charities Registration Boards (CRB).

READ MORE: Kiwi'sbody hangs upside-down in a -196C vat

The board rejected the foundations on the basis that cryonics was not an accepted academic discipline based on the lack, in mainstream science, of feasibility and benefits of the research.

This decision was then successfully appealed in october 2016 - when Justice Rebecca Ellis found cryonics research to fall squarely under the 'advancement of education' heading and therefore had 'charitable purpose'.

She said there was evidence that the proposed research was likely to lead to advances in areas such as organ transplant medicine, stem cell research, and treating a range of diseases and disorders.

The listed officers and trustees for both foundations have addresses Monaco, Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Others, Saul Kent and William Faloon bought an old church in downtown Hollywood in 2013 for $880,000 and founded the Church of Perpetual Life.

The pair are big were the cryonics world and both personally signed up for their shot at eternal life.

Nothing has been heard from the foundations since the CRB appeal and all attempts to contact the trustees were unsuccessful.

The closet thing that happens to freezing humans in New Zealand is cryogenically freezing tissue through the tissue banks of the New Zealand Blood Service.

Stem cells, skin, red blood cells and platelets are all submerged in a cryoprotectant and frozen to liquid nitrogen temperatures of around negative 196 degrees Celsius - for later human use.

"The skin cells last for up to 5 years, and stem cells up to ten years," said Richard Charlewood, the national tissue bank's medical director.

"We don't like keeping it for any longer than that because most of the studies only go up as far as ten years.

"At liquid nitrogen temperatures very little is actually happening at molecular level. So it's possible that they would be fine well beyond ten years, we just don't know for sure."

Charlewood said when cryo-preserving, the key thing is to get the cryoprotectant into all the cells that you want to keep alive, otherwise the formation of ice crystals can burst the cells and kill them.

"In terms of whole body freezing, my understanding is that you have to get the cryo-protectant to all the cells in the body, so you'd have to pump it around the body really thoroughly."

Fertility specialists in New Zealand also offer cryogenic preservation of eggs, ovarian tissue, sperm and embryos for reproductively-challenged patients who wish to conceive later.

Otago University's associate professor in botany, David Burritt, also regularly employs cryopreservation in his line of study.

Ina 2016 research paper he said cryopreservation was a great method for long-term storage ofreproductive plant material - such as seeds, pollen, dormant buds, shoot tips, embryos, or isolated plant cells or tissues.

"Plant material is first preconditioned, using chemical and physical treatments, so that it remains viable when it is frozen and during ultra-low temperature storage."

"Following re-warming, seeds and embryos can germinate, buds or shoot tips can be induced to grow, and whole plants can be regenerated from cryopreserved cells or tissues."

He said the samples could, in theory, be conserved indefinitely as "no metabolic activity occurs at these ultra-low temperatures."

'Cryobanking' enables large numbers of important crops, such as wheat, potato and various fruit and forest trees, to be cryopreserved, rewarmed and then allowed to grow into complete plants.

In March, scientists in the UK succeeded in cryogenically freezing and rewarming sections of heart tissue for the first time, in an advance that could pave the way for organs to be stored for months or years.

-Sunday Star Times

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The confounding world of Cryonics, and the Kiwi scientists trying to ... - Stuff.co.nz

JoAnn Ruth Martin, Riverside, Calif. – Mason City Globe Gazette

October 27, 1936 - May 25, 2017

JoAnn Ruth Martin was born on October 27, 1936 in Lansing, Mich.

She died on May 25, 2017, after living a vibrant life filled with love and devotion to her husband, Saul Kent, and to friends, family, and charitable causes, particularly three organizations she founded, The Riverside Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA), The California DBSA, and The Detroit Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA).

Fiercely independent, JoAnn grew up in Lansing with her mother, Ruth; her father, Rial and her brother, Robert. JoAnn became a teacher and a musician, playing the piano and singing in venues around the country.

She had two children, Emily McCue of Mammoth, Calif., and Nathalie Martin of Albuquerque, N.M. She was married for several years to Don Martin, the father of her daughter, Nathalie.

In 1985, she met the love for her life, Saul Kent. The two shared many interests, including cryonics. JoAnn soon moved from Detroit to California to be with Saul.

In 1986, JoAnn and Saul bought a property in Riverside, Calif., where JoAnn's passion for music, gardening, painting, and architecture enabled her to create a beautiful setting that would be used over the next three decades to hold many events, beginning with the wedding of her daughter, Nathalie, in 1988.

JoAnn's generosity was well-known in the community and her loss will be felt in the lives of hundreds of people. Jo Ann founded the Riverside DBSA in the fall of 1987, and has graciously opened her home to the public for DBSA meetings, holiday barbecues and dinners ever since.

She has been a friend and great source of support for mental health clients and advocates throughout the years. Jo Ann felt that her own experience with mental illness gave her insight and allowed her to help others. Jo Ann was first diagnosed with manic depression in 1963, the same year JFK was killed.

JoAnn is survived by husband, Saul Kent; daughters, Emily McCue and Nathalie Martin, and many friends.

A memorial to celebrate the life of JoAnn Martin will be held at her home on June 24, 2017, at 2:00 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations in JoAnn's memory may be made to the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance, 55 E. Jackson Blvd., Suite 490, Chicago, IL, 60604.

Cards may be sent care of Nathalie Martin, 1117 Stanford N.E., Albuquerque, NM, 87106.

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JoAnn Ruth Martin, Riverside, Calif. - Mason City Globe Gazette

Can A Human Be Frozen And Brought Back To Life? – Zidbits

Science

Published on February 21, 2011

We see it all the time in movies. A person gets frozen or put in cryosleep and then unfrozen at a later date with no aging taking place, or other ill effects.

Sometimes this happens on purpose, like to someone with an incurable disease hoping a cure exists in the future, or sometimes by accident, like someone getting frozen in a glacier.

The science behind it does exist and the application of the practice is called cryonics. Its a technique used to store a persons body at an extremely low temperature with the hope of one day reviving them. This technique is being performed today, but the technology behind it is still in its infancy.

Someone preserved this way is said to be in cryonic suspension. The hope is that, if someone has died from a disease or condition that is currently incurable, they can be frozen and then revived in the future when a cure has been discovered.

Its currently illegal to perform cryonic suspension on someone who is still alive. Those who wish to be cryogenically frozen must first be pronounced legally dead which means their heart has stopped beating. Though, if theyre dead, how can they ever be revived?

According to companies who perform the procedure, legally dead is not the same as totally dead. Total death, they claim, is the point at which all brain function ceases. They claim that the difference is based on the fact that some cellular brain function remains even after the heart has stopped beating. Cryonics preserves some of that cell function so that, at least theoretically, the person can be brought back to life at a later date.

After your heart stops beating and you are pronounced legally dead, the company you signed with takes over. An emergency response team from the facility immediately gets to work. They stabilize your body by supplying your brain with enough oxygen and blood to preserve minimal function until you can be transported to the suspension facility. Your body is packed in ice and injected with an anticoagulant to prevent your blood from clotting during the trip. A medical team is on standby awaiting the arrival of your body at the cryonics facility.

After you reach the cryonics facility, the actual freezing can begin.

They could, and while youd certainly be frozen, most of the cells in your body would shatter and die.

As water freezes, it expands. Since cells are made up of mostly water, freezing expands the stuff inside which destroys their cell walls and they die. The cryonics companies need to remove and/or replace this water. They replace it with something called a cryoprotectant. Much like the antifreeze in an automobile. This glycerol based mixture protects your organ tissues by hindering the formation of ice crystals. This process is called vitrification and allows cells to live in a sort of suspended animation.

After the vitrification, your body is cooled with dry ice until it reaches -202 Fahrenheit. After this pre-cooling, its finally time to insert your body into the individual container that will be placed into a metal tank filled with liquid nitrogen. This will cool the body down to a temperature of around -320 degrees Fahrenheit.

The procedure isnt cheap. It can cost up to $200,000 to have your whole body preserved. For the more frugal optimist, a mere $60,000 will preserve your brain with an option known as neurosuspension. They hope the technology in the future will allow them to clone or regenerate the rest of the body.

Many critics say the companies that perform cryonics are simply ripping off customers with the dream of immortality and they wont deliver. It doesnt help that the scientists who perform cryonics say they havent successfully revived anyone, and dont expect to be able to do so anytime soon. The largest hurdle is that, if the warming process isnt done at exactly the right speed and temperature, the cells could form ice crystals and shatter.

Despite the fact that no human placed in a cryonic suspension has yet been revived, some living organisms can be, and have been, brought back from a dead or near-dead state. CPR and Defibrillators can bring accident and heart attack victims back from the dead daily.

Neurosurgeons often cool patients bodies so they can operate on aneurysms without damaging or rupturing the nearby blood vessels. Human embryos that are frozen in fertility clinics, defrosted and implanted in a mothers uterus grow into perfectly normal human beings. Some frogs and other amphibians have a protein manufactured by their cells that act as a natural antifreeze which can protect them if theyre frozen completely solid.

Cryobiologists are hopeful that nanotechnology will make revival possible someday. Nanotechnology can use microscopic machines to manipulate single atoms to build or repair virtually anything, including human cells and tissues. They hope one day, nanotechnology will repair not only the cellular damage caused by the freezing process, but also the damage caused by aging and disease.

Some cryobiologists have predicted that the first cryonic revival might occur as early as year 2045.

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Can A Human Be Frozen And Brought Back To Life? - Zidbits

Off the Cuffs: Bibbs considers donation, cremation, cryonics – Cecil Whig

ELKTON I spent a fair amount of time in cemeteries last week, said Cuffs, explaining his recent absence from the local scene. Attending memorial services and visiting relatives graves.

Billy Bibbs and I nodded, encouraging the North Street Hotel curmudgeon to continue his report.

Peaceful places, Cuffs added. Usually pretty empty except on weekends and holidays. But during the workweek you might see a few workers doing landscaping and general maintenance. Opening up fresh graves for upcoming funerals.

Allows you plenty of privacy, and time to reflect upon your loved ones. Even talk out loud if you want. Nobody around to overhear your private thoughts.

Well, Bibbs said, that old fashioned burial-in-the-ground routine aint for me. Im going to get myself cremated. Save on cost, less aggravation to deal with, and no need to buy a clean white shirt and new suit plus Ill be doing my part to help the environment.

I nodded, offering no comment. I didnt care if Bibbs was tossed off the side of his crab boat into the upper Chesapeake, given a dirt nap in a county boneyard, or cooked to a crisp and had his ashes jammed in a jelly jar.

Cuffs thought differently, however, saying, You might want to think about donating your sorry stupid self to science, he said, sporting a smile. Maybe then some clumsy med student could look inside your thick skull and see what wires are crossed. Then wed find out why you were such a pain in all our backsides.

Jimmy, the saloons owner, happened to be passing by, and entered the conversation with a question: Have you ever heard of anybodys body being rejected for scientific study? From what I understand, years ago it was against the law. But now I hear they take everybody and anybody.

I couldnt resist, So that gives Bibbs two options. He can finally become some use to society as a scientific case study. Or spend the hereafter in a fancy vase, perched on somebodys bookshelf.

Id rather be scattered across the finish line at Delaware Park, Bibbs said. In fact, I think Ill make sure thats written down in my will.

Everyone enjoyed his remark, but when the laughter died down, Cuffs said, This cremation thing got me to thinking, so I did a bit of research.

Look out, said Jimmy, sounds like were moving into serious territory.

Did you know, Cuffs said, there are thousands. Maybe tens of thousands, of unclaimed cremated remains stacked in storage areas in funeral parlors across the country?

Youre crazy, said Bibbs, obviously annoyed, since he had announced bodily incineration as his preferred method of environmentally conscious disposal from Mother Earth. Where you getting that kind of information.

A bunch of articles on the internet focus on ashes left behind and never retrieved from crematoriums. Either because the family member forgot about the loved one, didnt want to pick him or her up, or didnt have the money to pay for the fireside service. So the undertakers hold onto Johnny or Jenney for as long as possible. Then, depending upon state law, they get rid of the remains as they see fit.

Sounds harsh, said Bibbs, his face displaying concern.

Looks like our pal Bibbs might be having second thoughts about his cremation determination, said Cuffs, as he slapped his perplexed friend across the back.

Entering into the discussion, I mentioned there were other problems with the disposition of ashen remains. Containers holding loved ones often become misplaced or lost by those entrusted with their care. Urns and vases are shoved into attics, storage sheds, and old trunks, or placed onto crowded basement shelves. Like boxes filled with old unidentified photographs, over time remains are forgotten. Until discovered years later by confused descendants or clueless strangers.

Theres also the so-called convenience of cremation that affects the ritual associated with the longstanding visitation process, Cuffs said.

Acknowledging the confusion apparent on the faces of the rest of the group, he added, My recent cemetery visits involved preparation for the trip, or journey. Locating the familiar resting place. Saying a few prayers, and having a brief conversation. Finally, placing a flag, special memento, or flowers near the marble marker.

That ritual, or process, is lost when the loved one is kept in a box on the bottom detergent shelf of a laundry room.

Youre exaggerating, challenged Bibbs, becoming more annoyed as the conversation continued.

Not so, I interjected. Over time, boxed or vased remains are treated with less reverence than a traditional burial site. I recall an unusual incident, when I was interviewing a couple of quirky historians in their home. As we sat down to talk, the wife brought out four fancy urns which held the remains of both sets of parents. She set them down on the coffee table, saying she thought her deceased relatives might enjoy listening to the interview.

Shaking his head, Bibbs said, Youre making that up. No way that ever happened.

Raising my right hand, I said, I swear on the remains of my late father that have been pressed into this diamond, worn on my right hand that I did not make up the statement about that interview.

What about the story of the diamond ring? Cuffs asked, as confused as the others by my addition of that little tidbit.

Smiling, I replied, Now thats a total fabrication, I said.

Picking up on my clever reply, Jimmy asked, So your ring or the wacky story is a fabrication from cremated ashes?

Ill let you decide, placing my hand on the table, and adding, By the way, theyre called cremation crystals, or cremations diamonds. A wearable trend thats increasing in popularity, environmentally friendly and, of course, politically correct.

Shaking his head, Jimmy said, What will they think of next?

Responding, Cuffs said, We havent even touched on cryonics deep freezing you after death. Only costs about $200,000, and you might end up in the same warehouse as Walt Disney.

I think we should put that topic on the shelf for another time, I said.

Yeah! Cuffs said, right next to Bibbs ashes.

Unless his relatives toss him out in an old outhouse, added Jimmy.

Or a yard sale, I said.

After the laughter subsided, Bibbs asked, If I donate myself to science, do I have to buy a new suit?

Nope, Cuffs said. Its even cheaper than cremation, and theyll take you just the way you are.

Count me in, Bibbs said.

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Off the Cuffs: Bibbs considers donation, cremation, cryonics - Cecil Whig

Frozen Dead Guy Days: The story behind Nederland’s most famous resident – The Denver Channel

NEDERLAND, Colo. -- The16thannual Frozen Dead Guy Days begins Friday in Nederland, inspired by the bizarre tale of the town's most famous -- albeit deceased -- resident.

For 27 years, "The Frozen Dead Guy's" body has, in theory, been cryogenically preserved on dry ice in the mountains overlooking the town, and the only way to see him is to go with the man paid to keep him on ice.

"I'm supposedly the only guy with keys," said Brad Wickham, opening the door to the now world-famous Tuff Shed. "I hope some day when he is reanimated, we can talk about all the fun we had bringing ice up here every two weeks."

The story goes something like this:Bredo Morstoelwas a minor public official in Norway, and when he died in 1989 his grandson, TrygveBauge, had him cryogenically preserved in the hopes he could one day be re-animated.

The body was eventually moved to Nederland, where Baugehad plans to build his own cryonics lab unit he was deported.

Now, Bauge pays Wickham $9,000 per year to buy and deliver between 900 to 1,200 pounds of dry ice every two weeks and cover his grandfather's frozen sarcophagus.

"It's basically a thin metal casket. It's been chained down to prevent theft," said Wickham, who said Bredo has never thawed out on his watch, but the previous iceman may have missed some runs. "He may have gotten pretty warm by cryonic standards, let's just put it that way. But I don't think ever over 32 degrees."

Next to the Tuff Shed, the abandoned cryonics lab is filled with boxes of notes, worthy of a mad scientist.

"I picture him sitting over a dim light bulb, Archimedesstyle, scribbling," said Wickham with a smile, pointing to the painting that was done by Bredo. "Trygve was really close to his grandfather."

And while the town fought having a frozen body in a neighborhood, it has since embraced the idea, naming an annual festival after it.

"It's not much, but I guess it suits him," said Wickham, closing the shed. "Stay cool, grandpa!"

Fore more on Frozen Dead Guy Days,click here.

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Frozen Dead Guy Days: The story behind Nederland's most famous resident - The Denver Channel

Murray Ballard shoots cryonics in The Prospect of Immortality – British Journal of Photography

Patient Care Bay (Bigfoot dewar being filled with liquid nitrogen), Alcor Life Extension Foundation, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA. October 2006. From The Prospect of Immortality Murray Ballard

As his project goes on show at Newcastle's Side Gallery, we republish an article on Ballard's eye-opening series first printed in BJP's July 2011 Ones to Watch issue

As debut projects go, Murray Ballard could scarcely have chosen a more intriguing subject than cryonics. The practice of preserving dead bodies at very low temperatures, in the hope of bringing them back to life far in the future, is commonly thought to exist only in science fiction, where it is generally known by its technically inaccurate name of cryogenic freezing.

Yet as Ballard (no relationto his namesake, the sci-fi author JG) discovered during his five- year investigation, hundreds of people around the world have alreadyinvested in what he has calls The Prospect of Immortality.

The 27-year-old began documenting cryonicists while studying photography at the University of Brighton, after he discovered there was a group of British believers based just along the Sussex coast in Peacehaven. He was soon making much longer excursions, his work taking him to the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Arizona three times, the rival Cryonics Institute in Michigan twice, and the burgeoning Kriorus facility just outside Moscow on a further two occasions.

Portable perfusion kit. Home of Alan and Silvia Sinclair. Peacehaven, East Sussex, UK. May 2007. From The Prospect of Immortality Murray Ballard

Having worked as an assistant to Magnum photographer Mark Power for four years, Ballard is now looking at biotechnology for his first commission, which will be shown as part of the British Science Festival. He revels in the honesty that working with a large format camera allows.

Youre not saying, Look at this bit of the picture, youre saying all of it is equally as important, and all of the details are there to piece together meaning and narrative, he explains.

Power was on hand last month to formerly open Ballards first major solo exhibition at Impressions in Bradford, featuring Ballards images of the people involved in this pursuit of real-life resurrection, and the equipment to which they are entrusting their dreams of everlasting life.

Margaret Kiseleva, holding a photograph of her mother, Ludmila, KrioRus facility, Alabushevo, Moscow. September 2010. From The Prospect of Immortality Murray Ballard

The Prospect of Immortality by Murray Ballard is on show at Side Gallery from 0 March 30 April. The images in the exhibition are taken from a larger touring show, which was originally commissioned by Impressions Gallery and curated by director Anne McNeill. http://www.amber-online.commurrayballard.comBallard also published a book of the project last year with GOST Books

This textwas originally published as part of the Ones to Watch series of articles on emerging photographers in July 2011. This issue is now sold out, but other back issues can be bought atwww.thebjpshop.com

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Murray Ballard shoots cryonics in The Prospect of Immortality - British Journal of Photography

Heart tissue cryogenics breakthrough gives hope for transplant patients – The Guardian

Freezing and rewarming sections of heart tissue successfully raises hopes for doing the same for the entire organ. Photograph: Sebastian Kaulitzki/Alamy

Scientists have succeeded in cryogenically freezing and rewarming sections of heart tissue for the first time, in an advance that could pave the way for organs to be stored for months or years.

If the technique scales up to work for entire organs and scientists predict it will it could save the lives of thousands who die each year waiting for transplants.

The work is being hailed as a major development in the field of cryopreservation as it marks the first time that scientists have been able to rapidly rewarm large tissue samples without them shattering, cracking or turning to a pulp. The US team overcame this challenge by infusing the tissue with magnetic nanoparticles, which could be excited in a magnetic field, generating a rapid and uniform burst of heat.

Kelvin Brockbank, chief executive officer of Tissue Testing Technologies in Charleston, South Carolina and a co-author, said: It is a huge landmark for me. We can actually see the road ahead for clinical use and getting tissues and organs banked and into patients.

Currently, donor organs such as hearts, livers and kidneys must be transplanted within hours because the cells begin to die as soon as the organs are cut off from a blood supply. As a result, 60% of the hearts and lungs donated for transplantation are discarded each year, because these tissues cannot be kept on ice for longer than four hours.

Recent estimates suggest that if only half of unused organs were successfully transplanted, transplant waiting lists could be eliminated within two to three years. The latest paper has been hailed as a significant step towards this goal.

Mehmet Toner, a professor of bioengineering who is working on cryopreservation at Harvard Medical School, said: Its a major breakthrough. Its going to catalyse a lot of people to try this in their laboratories. Im impressed.

Cryopreservation has been around for decades, but while it works well for red blood cells, sperm and eggs, scientists have come up against a barrier for samples with a volume larger than around one millilitre.

Previously, larger samples have been cooled successfully using a technique known as vitrification, in which the tissue is infused with a mixture of antifreeze-like chemicals and an organ preservation solution. When cooled to below -90C (-130F), the fluid becomes a glass-like solid and prevents damaging ice crystals from forming.

The real problem has been the thawing process. Unless the rewarming occurs rapidly and uniformly, cracks will appear in the tissue and tiny ice crystals suddenly expand, destroying cellular structures.

We can freeze tissue and it looks good, but then we warm it and there are major issues, said Toner.

The latest work scales up cryopreservation from one millilitre to about 50ml, and the scientists said they believe the same strategy is likely to work for larger skin transplants, sections of ovarian tissue and entire organs.

John Bischof, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Minnesota and the senior author of the study, said: We have extremely promising results and we believe that were going to be able to do it but we have not yet done it.

Brockbank and colleagues previously attempted and failed to use microwave warming to generate an even thawing. It failed dreadfully due to the development of hotspots in the tissue, he said.

In the latest paper, published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, the team describe the new nano-warming technique. Pig heart valves and blood vessels were infused with a cryoprotectant solution mixed with iron oxide nanoparticles, coated in silicon to make them biologically inert, and the samples were cooled in liquid nitrogen to -160C (-256F).

For thawing, the sample was placed inside an electromagnetic coil, designed to generate an alternating magnetic field. As the magnetic field is flipped back and forth, the particles jiggle around inside the sample and rapidly and uniformly warm tissue at rates of 100 to 200C per minute, 10 to 100 times faster than previous methods.

In tests of their mechanical and biological properties, the tissues did not show any signs of harm, unlike control samples rewarmed slowly over ice. The researchers were also able to successfully wash away the iron oxide nanoparticles from the sample following the warming although said that further safety testing would be required before the technique could be used in patients.

The team are now testing the technique on rabbit kidneys and human allografts, which are combinations of skin, muscle and blood vessels from donors.

That will be our first trial with human tissues, said Brockbank. If that is successful, we would then progressively move to structures such as the human face for banking and for hands for banking as well as digits.

However, he added that it was difficult to put a timeline on when the developments might have a clinical impact, as this depended on regulatory approval as well as overcoming significant scientific challenges.

The scientists acknowledged that their work may attract interest from the cryonics industry, which promises to freeze the bodies or heads of clients after their death in the hope of bringing them back to life in the future, when medicine has advanced.

There is a certain intellectual connecting of the dots that takes you from the organ to the person... I could see somebody making this argument, said Bischof, but added these ambitions were not science-based as unlike with organs, the person would already be dead when frozen.

Clive Coen, professor of neuroscience at Kings College London, described the technique as ingenious. If the technique can be scaled-up to large organs such as kidneys, the contributions to the field of organ transplantation could be immense, he said. Such painstaking and careful research is to be applauded and must not be confused with wishful thinking about sub-zero storage and subsequent reanimation of a human body, as envisaged by the cryonics industry

Almost 49,000 people in Britain have had to wait for an organ transplant in the past decade and more than 6,000, including 270 children, have died before receiving the transplant they needed, NHS statistics reveal.

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Heart tissue cryogenics breakthrough gives hope for transplant patients - The Guardian

Keegan Macintosh-British Columbia Guy Signs First Canadian Cryonic Contract – E Canada Now

A B.C. man who is challenging the provinces laws on the preservation of the body after death has signed a groundbreaking cryonic contract. Keegan Macintoshis believed to be the first person to sign a deal with a Canadian provider to keep his body in a state of permanent suspension.

The four-page contract between Keegan Macintosh and the Lifespan Society of B.C. is accepted to be the first run through a Canadian has marked with a neighborhood supplier to keep their body in a condition of lasting suspension.

The agreement is the most recent turn in a strange B.C. Preeminent Court confrontation over the regions Cremation, Interment and Funeral Services Act.

Macintoshs claim says the province is the only place on theplanet to fugitive cryonics.

The issue of cryonics increased overall consideration this month when a British judge allowed the last wishes of a 14-year-old who composed a letter before kicking the bucket of malignancy asking the court to let her mom cryogenically safeguard her body.

The decision made room for the young ladys remaining parts to be taken to an office in the U.S. to begin the conservation procedure at a cost of more than $62,000.

Various Canadians have marked cryonic safeguarding manages U.S. suppliers, however, Lifespan president Carrie Wong says the agreement with Macintosh is accepted to be the first of its kind in Canada.

Mac has altered his unique explanation of claim to mirror the marking of an agreement. Wong said the general public is currently holding up to perceive how the Crown reacts.

Wong said, If theyre really not interested, then anyone in B.C. can go into a cryonics arrangement.

As indicated by the terms of the arrangement, Lifespan will supplant Macintoshs blood with a sort of liquid catalyst to avoid ice gems framing when the body is cooled.

The general public additionally consents to suspend Macintoshs remaining parts at ultra-low temperatures.

Consequently, Macintosh will pay $30 a year.

The agreement gives a progression of capabilities around revival, beginning with the finishing date.

However, Lifespan additionally concurs that when in Lifespans best judgment, it is determined that attempting resuscitation is in the best interests of the cryopreserved member, Lifespan shall attempt to resuscitate (Macintosh).

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Keegan Macintosh-British Columbia Guy Signs First Canadian Cryonic Contract - E Canada Now

Going Underground: Cheltenham author’s book about cryonics to be used in groundbreaking scheme – Gloucestershire Live

Eagle-eyed city commuters will have the chance to read a Cheltenham author's book about preserving human life on Monday.

Copies of The Husband Who Refused to Die are being hidden in and around London tube stations as part of the groundbreaking Books On the Underground initiative.

Read: There's a pub in Gloucestershire where you can buy your dog a pint

The debut novel, with its original, and topical, cryonics premise, has had a great response from readers since its launch in December, with one reviewer describing it as 'truly a one-of-a-kind read'.

Andrea Darby, a former journalist who lives near Cheltenham, said: "I'm thrilled to be part of this fantastic initiative and hope that the commuters who find my book will enjoy reading it and pass it on."

Cordelia Oxley, Director of Books on the Underground, said the aim was to get more people reading and sharing books. "Titles are left on seats, benches, station signs and around ticket areas, with finders often keen to share their free discoveries on social media.

"The Book Fairies are excited to be working with Andrea and are looking forward to hiding copies of her amazing book on the London Underground. It's sure to get a big reaction!"

Read: Foo Fighters announce Glastonbury news at secret gig last night

The Husband Who Refused to Die, which Andrea describes as 'a story of love, loss, family and friendship' is about 40-year-old mum Carrie, whose husband Dan dies unexpectedly, just a few years after he revealed his wish to be frozen.

The narrative focuses on the difficult repercussions of this wish for Carrie and her teenage daughter, not least an intrusive media, an interfering sister-in-law and a mystery person with a serious grudge.

The book is available from Waterstones in Cheltenham and Gloucester, the Suffolk Anthology bookshop, as well as from Amazon, WHSmith and other online retailers.

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Going Underground: Cheltenham author's book about cryonics to be used in groundbreaking scheme - Gloucestershire Live

There’s a completely legal reason this American dentist has an office full of human heads – Quartz

Jordan Sparks found cryonics while sifting through the Portland State University library as a student in the early 1990s. He was fascinated. He stayed fascinated through dental school, and as a practicing dentist, and while building a dental management software whose success has given him the freedom these days to pursue the dream of a deep-frozen future full time.

There are three places in the US known to store preserved human brains in the hopes of reanimation: Alcor, the sleek Scottsdale, Arizona-based facility currently housing the head of baseball great Ted Williams; the Cryonics Institute, a 41-year-old organization outside Detroit; and Oregon Cryonics, which occupies Sparkss former dentistry office in the capital city of Salem.

Running a do-it-yourself cryonics shop from a former dental practice is not easy or cheap. Sparks has invested in a fleet of scientific equipment, much acquired second-hand, including liquid nitrogen, a fume hood, a CT scanner, microscopes, a vibratome, and a microtome. And then there is this line item: a steady supply of human heads.

About once a week, Sparks receives delivery of a gray plastic bucket containing the head of a person who died a few days earlier in the states of Oregon or Washington. Sparks is the first to admit that his facility isnt ready to offer cryopreservation to the paying public. (He has taken several cases pro bono; more on those later.) To ready himself for that future, he and his team of two assistants practice brain removal, temperature monitoring, and freezing techniques on the heads of recently-expired individuals who almost certainly had no idea a start-up cryonics venture would be their final destination.

He procures his specimens from one of a growing number of for-profit body donation companies, which supply human cadavers and their isolated parts for research and education purposes. In exchange for free cremation of unused remains and the hope of turning a personal loss into a benefit for the greater good, donors sign over to businesses a body that can be sold on for thousands of dollars.

The body donation industry occupies an unusual economic loophole in the US. Its illegal to sell human tissue. But companies that provide free bodies or parts for research are allowed to charge recipients for the expenses incurred obtaining the bodieslike the cost of transport, cremation, and staff time. Businesses set those fees themselves, and theyre not published or regulated anywhere. In practice, the rise of for-profit body donation firms like the one that supplies Oregon Cryonics has created a commercial market for cadavers as robust as that of any other commodity.

Body donations have saved and enhanced countless lives. Cadaver dissection is a cornerstone of medical training. Donated bodies allow experienced surgeons to perfect new techniques without risk to living patients and facilitate research in everything from dementia to automobile safety. But no federal regulation governs the trade, state regulations are patchy, and there are no standards for what counts as legitimate research.

And when it comes to acquiring bodies from these for-profit firms, deep-pocketed private commercial enterprises are often better positioned to get them than the educational or publicly-funded institutions most donors envision when they agree to give to science.

* * *

To be clear right up front: The people whose heads ended up in Sparkss lab did not get there by becoming organ donors. When a person agrees to donate organs by joining a state registry or signing a hospital consent form, he or she enters a tightly-controlled supply chain in which specific organsthe kidneys, lungs, heart, liver, pancreas, and intestinesare recovered from brain-dead donors and transplanted within hours into carefully-matched recipients. Individuals can also consent to donate tissues like bones, skin, and tendons, which can be collected up to 24 hours after death and stored long term.

In the US, the Food and Drug Administration regulates transplantable human cells and tissues. In transplant tissue donation, material recovered from a dead person is surgically implanted into a living person. This can mean new tendons for orthopedic injuries or new heart valves for cardiac disease patients. Donated skin could be used to create skin grafts for burn victims, or in an elective breast or penile enlargement.

Non-transplant tissue donations, which covers whole-body donations, are used only for research and education. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) doesnt regulate them. With a handful of exceptions, states dont regulate them. A trade group, the American Association of Tissue Banks (AATB), offers standards and an accreditation program, but membership is voluntary, and only a fraction of the US companies that take whole-body donations have signed on.

Its pretty sad. Were not regulated on a federal level whatsoever. We need to be, says Alyssa Harrison, chair of AATBs non-transplant donation committee and executive director of the United Tissue Network, a not-for-profit body donation company with offices in Arizona, Oklahoma, and Florida. Harrisons business is among the handful in the industry pushing for federal regulations. While there are clear economic motivations for an established company to pursue more regulationhigher barriers to entry mean less competitionHarrison says its also in the best interest of a public that assumes such donations are regulated more heavily than they are.

Most non-transplant bodies are used for exactly the kind of productive, legitimate research that donors and their families envision. Donated bodies have led to breakthroughs in the treatment of pain management, inflammatory diseases, and dementia. Government agencies from NASA to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to the Department of Defense have used cadavers to test the impact of trauma on human tissue, and commercial agencies have used that research to create everything from safer cars to safer football helmets.

But donors dont get a say in where their gift goes. Its up to the collecting company to decide who gets their bodies. Aeternitas Life, the Portland-based company that provides Sparks his heads, tells donors on its website that tissues and organs are only distributed to recognized and well-respected institutions that have undergone a strict verification and approval process. The criteria for a well-respected institution or strict verification process is up to the company, which has a financial interest in making those definitions as broad as possible.

* * *

Sparks owns the building that Oregon Cryonics occupies. The only other tenant is an orthodontist whose rental space is wedged between Oregon Cryonics administrative offices and its lab. Sparks looked rueful when I asked how the orthodontist feels about the cryonics work. Its temporary, he said. He hopes to break ground on a new headquarters this summer.

A tour reveals signs of the full-service cryonics center Sparks hopes to operate one day. A coffin-sized ice bath sits in a hallway. Down the corridor is a dimly lit room with a hospital bed and a vase of fake flowers. Its reserved for patients who want to take advantage of Oregons Death With Dignity Act, which allows doctors to prescribe lethal drugs to terminally ill patients who request them. Sparks envisions future Oregon Cryonics clients choosing to end their life in the facility so that preservation can begin immediately. No human has chosen to die there yet, but one client euthanized a pet in the room. Sparks froze the animals brain and sent it to Alcor.

There are about a dozen gray buckets stacked on a tile floor. Each contains a brain. A retail refrigerator contains five gray buckets, and those each also hold a brain inside. The difference between the brains on the floor and the brains in the fridge is that the floor brains are anonymously donated specimens obtained for training purposes. The fridge brains were each specifically bequeathed to Sparks by family members of the people who once owned them.

Sparks refers to these brains alternately as patients and charity cases. They came to him days or weeks after their owners deathsan eternity in cryonics, when every passing hour means further brain degradation and diminishing chances of reanimation. They were removed by pathologists or funeral directors at the next of kins request, and brought to Sparks with the desperate hope that technology might one day bring a loved one back.

Sparks tries very hard to talk families out of such donations. He was never the kind of dentist who tried to sell people on brighter smiles, he said, and hes not the kind of cryonicist who peddles in false hopes.

From a practical standpoint, were just not really equipped to be able to deal with patients, he said. Its kind of like the first McDonalds. You have to build everything first, and then you start offering your services. Hes keeping these brains here not because he thinks theyll ever be reanimated, but as a favor to families who werent quite ready to let a loved one go.

Thats not to say the deceased felt the same way. While Alcor and the Cryonics Institute only freeze people who specifically elected to have their remains preserved this way, Sparkss patientswith one exception well discuss in a bitwere preserved at their next of kins request, not their own. On the infinitesimal chance that future technology is able to return consciousness to these brains, their reanimated owners might be extremely surprised to awake from eternal slumber in a refrigerator.

If you revive someone and they say No, I dont want thiswell, theyre welcome to commit suicide if they want, Sparks said. From a pragmatic standpoint, theyre probably going to be grateful and not want to do that.

Another difference between Alcor and Oregon Cryonics is the technology used. At Alcor, brains and bodies are frozen after a long and detailed procedure that begins moments after death. They are preserved in carefully-monitored vats of liquid nitrogen cooled to -196C. Sparks preserved these brains with chemical fixatives and popped them in the fridge.

Sparks is a pragmatic cryonicist. Current technology is nowhere close to reanimating a preserved brain, he says. Hes also in the camp of cryonicists who say theres no point in freezing whole corpses. Any future scientist that can reanimate a brain can probably build an artificial body.

Sparks is interested in protecting what he calls the memories stored in our synapses. He imagines a time when it will be possible to run a computer model of a cryopreserved brain thats able to translate the person within: the skills, personality, and memories its owner possessed in life. For now hes focused on perfecting the technique of freezing and preserving brains for that far-off future.

* * *

One recent gray afternoon in Salem, the team gathered around a stainless-steel surgical table in Oregon Cryonics lab. A mans head sat in a gray bucket on a bed of pebble-sized ice chips like the ones in hotel ice makers. The head protruded from the bucket from the nose up, eyes closed, with an expression like a relaxed bather who has just come to the surface for air.

Attended by two gloved employees wearing surgical gowns and protective goggles, Sparks picked up a cranial drill and bore a hole into the top of the head, which shook as if vigorously objecting. He then inserted three long, blue temperature probes: one on the brains surface, one 5 cm deep, and another at 8 cm. The goal is to measure the rates at which different parts of the brain cool.

We wouldnt do this on a patient because it would be causing damage to a brain, Sparks explained. This is the only way we can get the information. Then he put the donated head in a Ziploc baggie and placed it in a waiting CT scanner.

* * *

Aeternitas Life, the company supplying donated heads to Oregon Cryonics, opened for business in December 2015, two and a half years after founder and president Fineas Lupeiu graduated from Portland State University at age 18. Now 22, Lupeiu runs one of four businesses licensed in Oregon to deal in whole body donations. (Oregon Cryonics is one toothe legal designation lets them directly accept bodies of people wishing to be cryopreserved.)

The companys name is a play on eternity, in the way an individual is able to live on, Lupeiu said by phone. I think its Latin or something.

The business has accepted more than 100 donors so far. Lupeiu handles all the bodies himself, equipped with a bachelors degree in general science and a year of work each at a body donation company and a transplant tissue bank. Definitely procuring tissue the first time, its kind of a weird experience, Lupeiu said. Its an amazing thing to hold a brain or a heart or a pair of lungs. The fascination takes over the weirdness of it fairly early on.

Aeternitas distinguishes itself from its two competitors in Oregon by accepting bodies the others wontpeople with obesity, for example, or with amputated limbs. As long as the donor had no communicable diseases, were able to accept basically anyone, Lupeiu said.

Sparks was one of his first clients. Lupeiu started following Oregon Cryonics in college and got in touch after launching his business. He is proud of Aeternitass relationship with Oregon Cryonics and its role in facilitating what he sees as valuable research on the brain. He was once able to provide Sparks with a head only a few hours after its former owner died. (The donor had registered in advance, which speeds up the process; otherwise, it takes a few days.)

There are two types of body donors: people who arrange to donate their own bodies in advance of their deaths, and those whose next of kin make those arrangements after death. The first kind actively seeks out a company like Aeternitas. The second hears about such businesses from hospices, funeral directors, or other providers Lupeiu has built relationships with.

There is a powerful incentive for families to go with body donation: companies pay for all expenses associated with the bodys transportation and cremation. The average cremation in the US costs $1,100. Given that two thirds of Americans say theyd have trouble coming up with $500 in cash in an emergency, its an expense for which many families are unprepared.

As to who gets the bodies: Aeternitass client approval process includes running a background check, looking at the businesss website, seeing if the researcher has published, and doing site inspections when possible, Lupeiu said. He has watched experiments at Oregon Cryonics himself and is satisfied that its the best use to which Aeternitas Life can put the brains in its inventory.

He tells donors and their families that bodies may be used for research on the preservation and structure of the brain. He does not say that the long-term goal of that research is cryopreservation, nor that the researcher has no formal training in neuroscience. We dont specifically mention the organization, he said. We dont feel that would be appropriate, just in terms of protecting the privacy of where the donation goes and protecting our clients.

Both he and Sparks declined to divulge the exact amount Lupeiu charges per head. Sparks said he pays in the high hundreds or low thousands of dollars for each specimen. Lupeiu concurred, saying each one was a few thousand. Alyssa Harrison at the AATB says thats in line with industry norm, but its hard to find anyone in the body-donation industry who will share specifics when it comes to costs. Even the otherwise forthcoming Harrison says politely but firmly that the figures body donation firms charge for their services are not publicly available.

The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, first passed in 1968 and revised several times since, prohibits buying or selling human tissue in the US. The law reflects an instinctive revulsion to the idea commoditizing the human body, and its also meant to level the playing field of public health: if organs were priced according to market demand, only the rich could afford organs. It is legal, however, for procurers to charge recipients of human bodies or tissues a fee to cover expenses like transportation, cremation, staff time, and disease testing.

But if those expenses arent made public, and no auditing agency is making sure theres a legitimate relationship between expenses incurred and fees charged, the prohibition on charging for bodies is a totally meaningless regulation, said Todd Olson, a retired professor of anatomy at New York Citys Albert Einstein College of Medicine. In other words, human bodies and their parts exist in a curious economic space in the US: legally they are not allowed to have monetary value, but in practice they most certainly do.

To my knowledge, the United States is the only country that has seen the development of legal entrepreneurial ventures supplying cadavers for medical education and research, wrote Michel Anteby, an associate professor at Boston Universitys Questrom School of Business in a 2009 Economic Sociology article entitled A Market For Human Cadavers in All But Name? He went on:

Arguably, our grandparents, parents, and friends are not being traded on an open market Quite the contrary, US law ensures that sufficient protection is in place so that this could never happen. However, the ability to legally acquire a cadaver and reimburse a supplier for procuring costs is an important step in creating a market infrastructure. It is a market where the goods are not priced, but the services are.

As in any goods and services market, those with more money are at an advantage. Right now its the profit driving distribution, not the benefit to humanity, Olson said. I can tell you right now that there are medical schools across the country that are really unable to teach neuroanatomy because of the difficulty in acquiring human brains.

* * *

Legally, its sufficient for companies to tell donor families that their gifts can be used for any purpose, anywhere. Ethically, bioethicists and industry leaders say, thats not enough.

If a researcher has in mind something that a family probably wouldnt have imagined, its not adequate for the family to consent to doing, quote, anything, said Robert Veatch, a professor of medical ethics at Georgetown University. Since 1988 hes been on the board of the Washington Regional Transplant Consortium, which oversees all organ donations in the Washington, DC metropolitan area.

To most scientists, tissue is tissue is tissue. Families dont see it that way, Veatch said. Certain parts of the bodyheads, hands, and uteruses in particularhave emotional significance for donors that other parts dont, Veatch said. For consent to be meaningful, donors or their families should be specifically informed if those are going to be used. And if the nature of the research is unusual, donors or their families should know that too, Veatch said. Some people might object to cryonics on religious or other grounds. In the absence of government regulation, companies should take it upon themselves to make that information available, and not just to families who think to ask.

Harrison concurs. As an example, she says, her company doesnt currently provide donor bodies to the military for ballistics testingwhich is a real use for cadaversbut if it did, that would be in its donor contract. I feel like you should be as explicit as possible, she said. We use the words disarticulation and dismemberment because I want my families to be completely comfortable that your loved one will be dismembered for the purpose of education.

Aeternitas takes a less direct approach. Their donor contract is vague (pdf). While Lupeiu says he would provide more information to any family that asked directly, he has never told anyone in explicit terms that a donors head may be used to carry out experiments in cryonics. When describing specific procedures the body undergoes after donation, he prefers to use less direct terms: for example, appendages are recovered, not removed.

We stayed away from that type of language in our terms and conditions. The way that weve worded it is a lot softer than, say, Youre separating different parts of the body and such, Lupeiu explained. The companys terms state that the body may undergo extensive preparation and long-term preservation upon donation. The most graphic line about the process is: In most cases, an open casket viewing or embalming is not compatible with donation.

People who arrange to donate their own bodies tend to be more comfortable with an anything-goes approach and with explicit details of the process, several people in the industry said. But for families who choose to donate a loved ones bodya decision often made while stressed and grieving, potentially under financial pressureit can be distressing to learn the messy reality of donation after the fact. Veatch served as an expert witness in a 1998 trial in which a Florida mans family won a judgment against a tissue bank after the mans head was discovered in a local incinerator; the court agreed that the family had been inadequately informed about the way their loved ones body would be used.

The FDA tightened regulation of the transplant tissue industry in 2005 after several high-profile cases in which patients sickened and died after receiving bacteria-infected donor tissues. The agency waved off Quartzs questions about tissues donated for educational purposes, saying that donations not for therapeutic purposes are outside the agencys scope. But the thorniest questions in non-transplant donation are of ethics, not public health. This is part of the reason its so hard to regulate the industry, Harrison said. How much information should be offered up front, when families have such different levels of familiarity with the donation process and different levels of comfort with the details? What qualifies as an unorthodox use of the human body?

In the case of Oregon Cryonics, some potential donors might be tickled to learn that their brains or those of loved ones helped advance the remote possibility of life after death. Others might object, and others still indifferent. But most in the industry agree that, at the very least, they should have the choice.

* * *

Oregon Cryonics lab technician Laura Jackson opened a gray bucket and gently removed a mans head. The team shaves specimens upon arrival, and there was stubble on his cheeks and scalp. She lifted the head and placed it on a laboratory work surface, where it faced the front of the room with an expression between repose and surprise. With a scalpel and bone saw, Jackson methodically remove the scalp and skull to reveal the brain underneath. The pieces of bone dropped into a waiting trash can with the sound of seashells clinking in a bowl.

Once the brain was isolated, the remains of the mans head would be driven across town to an unlikely storage facility: the offices of Open Dental, where Sparks brother is now CEO. Sparks led me through rows of cubicles where 110 employees take tech support calls. He unlocked a door and we entered a high-ceilinged room housing a stainless steel vat of liquid nitrogen along one wall and a chest freezer on another.

The freezer contains stacks of gray buckets holding the excess skin, bones, and tissues of the donor heads. Stickers on the buckets indicate the donors identifying numbers. When the freezer is full, Sparks will take the contents to a local crematorium. Its standard procedure at Aeternitas Life and other body donation firms to return to the donors family the ashes of remains cremated once donated parts have been removed. Whoever ends up with those parts is responsible for cremating any other unused tissue, but they dont give those ashes to the families. Sparks hasnt decided yet where to scatter the ashes. Probably at a cemetery, he said.

The vats another story. It contains the deep-frozen brain of the only Oregon Cryonics patient who specifically wanted cryopreservation, for which his estate paid Sparks $25,000. Sparks used to keep the vat at Oregon Cryonics, he explained, but the building is wood-framed, and its a fire risk. Yes, the employees in his call center know whats on the other side of the door in their office, he said. But hes the only one with the key.

The man was registered with the Cryonics Institute in Michigan, but after he died suddenly at his home, his body was not discovered for several days. The Cryonics Institute would no longer take him. By the time the mans partner arranged to ship the brain to Salem, it had decomposed to the point where Sparks believes that, even if memory retrieval becomes a real thing, itll be impossible for this patient.

On the chance hes wrong, however, Sparks is honoring the mans wishes. The brain will stay where it is, in a stainless steel cooking pot in a vat of liquid nitrogen at a software companys call center, until a better future comes calling.

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There's a completely legal reason this American dentist has an office full of human heads - Quartz

50 Years Frozen: Cryonics Today – Paste Magazine

On January 12, 1967, psychology professor James Bedford died due to cancer-related natural causes. Within hours, a team of scientists filled his veins with antifreeze. They packed his body in a container full of dry ice, and in so doing made Bedford the first man ever frozen alive in the name ofwell, if not science, something that aspired to be science one day: cryonics.

On December 23rd, 2009, at 4 a.m., I listened to my neighbors play Forever Young for the fortieth time in a row. Either the partygoers had either left or the DJ had died, and any attendees were either passed out or too blitzed to notice. The song played on repeat:

Forever young, I want to be Forever young.

I aged 10 years that night, while Bedfordtucked away in a fresh liquid nitrogen bath that came complementary with his 1991 inspectionremained immortal.

What is Cryonics, for Crying out Loud? Fifty years have passed since Bedford volunteered to become the first cryogenically frozen man. And while cultural depictions sporadically crop upthink Austin Powers, Futurama and yes, Mel Gibsonin Forever Youngcryonics is often thought to belong more to the realm of science fiction than science, and to put an even finer point on it, an escapist fiction that eludes actionable reality.

Yet cryonics offers grounds just as fertile for ethics as they do the imagination. Just think: people wage fierce wars about when life begins. Cryonics twists, turns and flips that argument around to become a deeper meditation on the moment that life ends.

So when does it?

When a Body Becomes a Patient The Alcor Life Extension Foundation which preserved Bedford describes cryonics as an effort to save lives by using temperatures so cold that a person beyond help by todays medicine can be preserved for decades or centuries until a future medical technology can restore that person to full health. The Foundation tellingly describes its members as patientsnot bodies. The dewars are not coffins, they are the temporary resting place for people who will one day wake up.

Michael Hendrix, neuroscientist and assistant professor of biology at McGill University, describes how the future of cryonics rests upon the promise of new technologies in neuroscience, particularly recent work in connectomicsa field that maps the connections between neurons a detailed map of neural connections could be enough to restore a persons mind, memories and personality by uploading it into a computer simulation.

In other words, cryonics claims that a cryogenically frozen person is not dead. He or she is merely on pause, similar to the way a video game character wont age while the player fiddles through the menu screen. The cycle of life rests upon the ability of scientistsand technologyto catch up to an idea born centuries before its time.

And as far as the science of resuscitation, cryonics does not actually rely upon the preservation of the entire body (as the choice of some people to have just their heads frozen, notably MLB player Ted Williams, testifies to), but upon the ability to map out the neurological connections between the brain, lift that map and recreate it in another bodypossibly a robot, possibly something scientists and dreamers havent yet conceived.

The Grounds for Debate Arguments against cryonics often hinge upon two main points. The first is that at best, the ethical implications of the procedure show a Labradors level of devotion to the promise of science. At worst, they play upon the emotions (and pocketbooks) of the bereaved survivors, who hold out false hope for the resuscitation of their loved one, possibly derailing and even deranging the cycles of the grieving process. The second rawand undeniablefact is that the technology for making a frozen person reenter society as a whole, living human being simply does not exist.

As for arguments for it? The most simple, powerful argument of all: immortality.

In 2014, the total count of cyropreserved bodies reached 250. An estimated 1,500 people total had made arrangements for cryopreservation after their legal death. The New York Times cites nonreligious white males as the main partakers, outdoing females by a ratio of three to one. As the worlds first volunteer, Bedford received a freebie, but most cyropreservation costs at least $80,000. A Russian company, KioRus, boasts the steal at $12,000 a headliterally speaking. But costs all but disappear in the face of a successful experiment. Say someone pays $80,000 now to rejoin the living 200 years later? Forget about calculating inflation differences.

No matter what side of cryonics one comes down uponand science offers arguments for botha central idea remains, both chilling and mesmerizing, depending upon the way its turned. A successful cyropreservation would entail rebirthbut into a world wholly different than the one left behind. If James Bedford came back tomorrow, could he handle the emotionalnot to mention mentaltribulations of adjusting to a world that moved on without him? Would the forever young experience drone on like the song on that December night, an individual sentenced to the eternal return of the same song, Existence?

After my own encounter with Forever YoungI certainly hope not.

Elisia Guerena is a Brooklyn based writer, who writes about tech, travel, feminism, and anything related to inner or outer space.

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50 Years Frozen: Cryonics Today - Paste Magazine

Cryonics This Scottish author pays 50 pounds a month to preserve his brain after death – Zee News

New Delhi: Of late, the science of cryonics seems to have captivated the hearts of scientists and the public alike with some people now opting for cryopreservation after their deaths.

Cryonics is the practice or technique of deep-freezing the bodies of those who have died of a disease, in the hope of a future cure.

In a latest, an author from Scotland has started paying a research institute to preserve his brain cryogenically after his death.

As per reports, DJ MacLennan has been paying 50 pounds ( appriximately Rs 4,000) a month for the past decade to Alcor Institute in Arizona, USA, to preserve his brain in the hope that he can one day be brought back to life.

MacLennan, who lives on the Isle of Skye, has told the institute that when he dies he wants the team of volunteers to fill his body with anti-freezing liquid before plunging it into ice water. His body will then be wrapped in a polyethylene, submerged in alcohol and lowered into ice before being shipped to Arizona. The head will then be removed and frozen in liquid nitrogen before being stored.

According to MacLennan, if organs can be donated and aren't wasted anymore, brains should definitely not be wasted, instead it's the important part to store.

While the full-body procedure costs 75,000 pounds, the author from Skye, has opted for the 40,000 pounds brain freeze.

In November last year, a 14-year old girl who died of cancer became the first child to be cryogenically frozen after death in the UK.

The procedure was carried out after winning a landmark court case shortly before her death. She had written a heartbreaking letter to a judge explaining that she wanted a chance to live longer after suffering from a rare form of deadly cancer.

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Cryonics This Scottish author pays 50 pounds a month to preserve his brain after death - Zee News

Head Case Scottish writer: ‘Decapitate me after death, freeze my … – Herald Scotland

DJ Maclennan is hoping for a good death. When the time comes, the Isle of Skye writer wants to be surrounded not just by his family, but by the emergency volunteer stand-by team from Cyronics UK.

Since 2007, he has been paying 50 a month to the Alcor Institute in the town of Scottsdale, Arizona. For that they will 'cryopreserve' his head (it costs significantly more to keep the whole body) in a tank of liquid nitrogen, keeping it there, the company promises on their website, for decades or centuries until a future medical technology can restore that person to full health.

All going well, within ten minutes of MacLennan breathing his last, that team, made up of enthusiastic amateurs, none of whom have professional medical training, will take control of his body. Theyll start by giving the cadaver oxygen, and chest compressions before placing it in an ice bath.

Then they administer drugs to stabilise biological systems and prevent clotting and brain damage through cell destruction. Once thats done they remove the corpse to their mortuary, cut open carotid arteries jugular veins and replace the blood with an an antifreeze solution. Within 24 hours of death, the body must have been cooled to at least -20C. Then, and only then is it ready to transport over to Americas west coast, where the head will be removed.

The problem for MacLennan is he needs the NHS and the Procurator Fiscal to let this happen, and right now that looks unlikely. Bodies in Scotland cant be released to family until theres a death certificate, and every death certificate needs a cause of death.

If that death is unexplained or sudden, then it gets reported to the Procurator Fiscal who takes over legal responsibility for the body until a cause can identified.

That often requires time or even a post-mortem, both of which make cryopreservation impossible, and the 40,000 or so MacLennan will have paid to Alcor over his lifetime would be for nothing.

Unfortunately, while we will always be sympathetic to requests by members of a family, this has to be balanced with the need for an independent and thorough investigation and a post mortem examination will sometimes still be required, the Procurator Fiscal tells the Sunday Herald.

None of Scotlands 14 health boards, or the NHS National Services Scotland, have any policy or guidelines on cryonics. Some of them are even openly hostile to the idea. NHS Western Isles said they would not facilitate volunteer medics, who may have no medical experience to operate on a dead person, regardless if this was the wish of the dead person.

The Scottish Government also has no policy, and say theyre waiting on the results of an information gathering exercise undertaken by the Human Tissue Authority, who were mobilised into action in the wake of last years high profile legal row between the parents of JS, the 14 year old dying of cancer who wanted her body to be cryopreserved.

Mr Justice Peter Jackson, who sat on that case, suggested there needed to be proper regulation of cryonic preservation in this country if it is to happen in future.

That was in part a response to fears expressed by JSs doctors over the Cryonics UK standby team. The medical staff said the volunteers were under-equipped and disorganised. The groups ambulance had broken down, and was replaced by a van.

The Human Tissue Authority will in the next few months produce two pieces of guidance, one for medical professionals and one for members of the public. Though they werent willing to tell the Sunday Herald what was in those guidelines.

Given this is a procedure thats been going on for 30 years it's surprising that there's no policy for it in the place in the UK, MacLennan says.

He is happy to talk about cryonics, and has written books on the process, as part of an attempt to normalise it a little bit and take the Frankenstein factor out if it.

Cryonics is potentially exponential technology, he argues. When people see the price coming down there'll come a point when they see a benefit. The cost will be finite and the benefit will potentially be infinite, because if it works the benefits are potentially infinite.

But this is currently a niche issue. No one is sure, but it seems there are around 100 people in the UK who have opted for cryopreservation.

In Scotland, the NHS and the Procurator Fiscal have yet to deal with any cases of Cryonics.

Professor Clive Coen from Kings College London believes there should be a ban on the marketing of cryonics, saying the idea of preserving a whole body was ridiculous and a whole brain only slightly less ridiculous.

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Head Case Scottish writer: 'Decapitate me after death, freeze my ... - Herald Scotland

Florida’s First Body-Freezing Cryonics Facility Now Open In Miami – CBS Local


CBS Local
Florida's First Body-Freezing Cryonics Facility Now Open In Miami
CBS Local
It's Florida's first body-freezing cryonics facility in the hopes of freezing individuals and then bringing them back to life in a few decades. Is it eternal life or science fiction? It's called Osiris, who is the Egyptian God of the afterlife, and it ...

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Florida's First Body-Freezing Cryonics Facility Now Open In Miami - CBS Local

The Little Glass Boy – Hyperallergic

Fred Valentine, The Little Glass Boy (2016), charcoal on disrupted paper, 22 x 32 inches

I often turn to drawing during tough times. It is less of a respite and more of a regroup. I have drawings that I work on over a number of years. This is one of them. My subjects need breath, blood, and DNA to be convincing. If they dont have it I put it them on a back burner. They lie in the flat file like a body on a slab at a cryonics lab. There will come a time. We will meet again.

I found that time on an early autumn morning during the final weeks of the campaign. The country was being hijacked by an evil and dangerous huckster. A sociopathic bully who wants to rob the country of its life and dreams was all anyone was talking about. Its the fragile, defenseless, and invisible ones who will take the hit and feel it first. They always do. That brings me to the backstory of this drawing.

Forty-five years ago I had attitude, a young mans swagger. I was a bit of a punk and usually ready for a fight. That made me a repeated target for the local police.

On one particular morning I arrived three hours late for Ed Colstons three hour class. Ed Colston had facial hair like Malcolm X; he wore kente cloth dashikis and very often sunglasses. He spoke in a gravelly voice just above a whisper. When I arrived the classroom was empty except for Mr. Colston. I was beginning to explain myself when he said, I know, I heard. I was arrested the night before but this time couldnt afford bail. I had to spend the night in jail and wait for an early morning court appearance. He appreciated the energy and pedal to the metal pace that I kept but was concerned about my recklessness, I suppose. He asked if he could show me something. We arrived at his studio and he pulled out a painting. It was the only painting that he showed me in a roomful of paintings. Its called Little Black Sambo with a Hard On for Life. he whispered in my ear. And then we left.

Over the years that painting has come to mean, among other things, strength and a sparkling yet bruised resilience. When Ed showed it to me that morning, it was one of the sweetest and most genuinely human gestures Ive ever been given.

Forty-five years ago was also a time of great divide and anger. I think about Ed and his Little Black Sambo often and I mean often. Because he understood. That is what caring people do. That is what he did and why he did it.

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The Little Glass Boy - Hyperallergic