{"id":69223,"date":"2016-07-10T18:00:34","date_gmt":"2016-07-10T22:00:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/perfusion-diffusion-in-cryonics-protocol-ben-best\/"},"modified":"2016-07-10T18:00:34","modified_gmt":"2016-07-10T22:00:34","slug":"perfusion-diffusion-in-cryonics-protocol-ben-best","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/perfusion-diffusion-in-cryonics-protocol-ben-best\/","title":{"rendered":"Perfusion &amp; Diffusion in Cryonics Protocol &#8211; BEN BEST"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>by Ben Best            CONTENTS: LINKS TO SECTIONS      BY TOPIC            <\/p>\n<p>    Preparing a cryonics patient for cryostorage can involve three    distinct stages of alteration of body fluids:  <\/p>\n<p>    (1) patient    cooldown\/cardiopulmonary support  <\/p>\n<p>    (2) blood washout\/replacement    for patient transport  <\/p>\n<p>    (3) cryoprotectant    perfusion  <\/p>\n<p>    During patient cooldown\/cardiopulmonary support, a cryonics    emergency response team or health care personnel may inject a    number of medicaments to minimize ischemic injury and facilitate    cryopreservation. The first and most important of these    medicaments would be heparin, to prevent blood clotting.    (For more details on the initial cooldown process, see Emergency Preparedness for a    Local Cryonics Group).  <\/p>\n<p>    Once the patient is cooled, the blood can be washed-out and    replaced with a solution intended to keep organs\/tissues alive    while the patient is being transported to a cryonics facility.    At the cryonics facility the organ\/tissue preservation solution    is replaced with the cryopreservation solution intended to    prevent ice formation when the patient is further cooled to    temperatures of 120C (glass transition temperature) or 196C    (liquid nitrogen temperature) for long-term storage.  <\/p>\n<p>    For both organ\/tissue preservation & cryoprotection it is    necessary to replace the fluid contents of blood vessels &    tissue cells with other fluids. The process of injecting &    circulating fluids through blood vessels is called    perfusion. The passive process by which fluids enter    & exit both blood vessels & cells is called    diffusion.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Body fluids can be described as solutes dissolved in a    solvent, where the solvent is water and the solutes are    substances like sodium chloride (NaCl, table salt), glucose or    protein. Both water and solute molecules tend to move randomly    in fluid with energy and velocity that is directly proportional    to temperature. When there is a difference in concentration    between water or solute molecules in one area of the fluid    compartment compared to the rest of the compartment, random    motion of the molecules will eventually result in a uniform    distribution of all types of molecules throughout the    compartment. In thermodynamics this is termed a decrease in    potential energy (Gibbs free energy, not heat energy) due to an    increase in entropy at constant temperature  leading to    equilibrium.<\/p>\n<p>    The movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to    an area of low concentration is called diffusion. The    rate of diffusion (J) can be quantified by    Fick's law of diffusion:  <\/p>\n<p>            dc     J =    DA----        dx         J    = rate of diffusion (moles\/time)     D    = Diffusion coefficient     A    = Area across which diffusion occurs     dc\/dx = concentration gradient    (instantaneous concentration difference divided by    instantaneous distance)  <\/p>\n<p>    Fick's First Law states that the rate of diffusion down a    concentration gradient is proportional to the instantaneous    magnitude of the concentration gradient (which changes as    diffusion proceeds). For movement of molecules from a region of    higher concentration to a region of lower concentration dc\/dx    will be negative, so multiplying by DA gives a positive value    to J. Diffusion coefficient is higher for higher temperature    and for smaller molecules.  <\/p>\n<p>    Diffusion can occur not only within a fluid compartment, but    across partitions that separate fluid compartments. The    relevant partitions for animals are cell membranes and    capillary walls. Cell membranes are lipid bilayers that allow    for free diffusion of lipid soluble substances like oxygen,    nitrogen, carbon dioxide and alcohol, while blocking movement    of ions and polar molecules. But cell membranes also contain    channels made of protein. Protein channels for water allow for    very rapid diffusion of water across the membranes. Protein    channels for potassium(K+),    sodium(Na+) and other ions allow for more    restricted diffusion across cell membranes. There is also    facilitated diffusion (active transport) of many types of    molecules across membranes.  <\/p>\n<p>    For a normal 70kilogram (154pound) adult the total    body fluid is about 60% of the body weight. Almost all of this    fluid can be described as extracellular or    intracellular (excluding only cerebrospinal fluid,    synovial fluid and a few other small fluid compartments).    Extracellular fluid can be further subdivided into    plasma (noncellular part of blood) and interstitial    fluid (fluid between cells that is not in blood vessels).    Cell membranes separate intracellular fluid from    extracellular fluid, whereas capillary walls separate    plasma from interstitial fluid. The relative percentages of    these fluids can be summarized as:  <\/p>\n<p>    Intracellular fluid 67%    Extracellular fluid    Interstitial fluid 26%    Plasma        7%  <\/p>\n<p>    Note that blood volume includes both plasma & blood cells    such that adding the intracellular fluid volume of blood cells    to plasma volume makes blood 12% of total body fluid.  <\/p>\n<p>    Osmosis refers to diffusion of water (solvent) across a    membrane that is semi-permeable, ie, permeable to water,    but not to all solutes in the solution. If membrane-impermeable    solutes are added to one side of the membrane, but not to the    other side, water will be less concentrated on the solute side    of the membrane. This concentration gradient will cause water    to diffuse across the semi-permeable membrane into the side    with the solutes unless pressure is applied to prevent the    diffusion of water. The amount of pressure required to prevent    any diffusion of water across the semi-permeable membrane is    called the osmotic pressure of the solution with    respect to the membrane.  <\/p>\n<p>    Osmotic pressure (like vapor pressure lowering and    freezing-point depression) is a colligative property,    meaning that the number of particles in solution is more    important than the type of particles. One molecule of albumin (molecular weight 70,000) contributes as    much to osmotic pressure as one molecule of glucose or one    sodium ion. At equilibrium all molecules in a solution have    achieved the same average kinetic energy, meaning that    molecules with a smaller mass have higher average velocity.    Thus, a one molar solution of NaCl will result in twice the    osmotic pressure as a one molar solution solution of glucose     because Na+ and Cl ions exert osmotic    pressure as independent particles.  <\/p>\n<p>    Solute concentrations are generally expressed in terms of    molarity (moles of solute per liter of solution). The    osmolarity of a solution is the product of the molarity    of the solute and the number of dissolved particles produced by    the solute. A one molar (1.0M, one mole per    liter) solution of CaCl2 is a three    osmolar (three osmoles per liter) solution because of    the Ca2+ ion plus the two Cl ions    produced when CaCl2 is added to water.    Osmolarity, the number of solute particles per    liter has been mostly replaced in practice by    osmolality, the number of solute particles per    kilogram. (For dilute solutions the values of the two    are very close.) For describing solute concentrations in body    fluids it is more convenient to use thousandths of osmoles,    milli-osmoles (mOsm). Total solute osmolality of    intracellular fluid, interstitial fluid or plasma is roughly    300mOsm\/kgH2O. About half of the osmolality of    intracellular fluid is due to potassium ions and associated    anions, whereas about 80% of the osmolality of interstitial    fluid and plasma is due to sodium and chloride ions.  <\/p>\n<p>    As stated above, both osmotic pressure and freezing point    depresssion are colligative properties. All colligative    properties are convertible. One osmole of any solute will lower    the freezing point of water by 1.858C. For this reason, a 0.9%    NaCl solution is 0.154molar or about    308mOsm\/kgH2O, and will lower the freezing    point of water by about 0.572C.  <\/p>\n<p>    The osmolality of a solution is an absolute quantity    that can be calculated or measured. The tonicity of a    solution is a relative concept that is associated with osmotic    pressure and the ability of solutes to cross a semi-permeable    membrane. Thus, tonicitiy of a solution is relative to the    particular solutes and relative to a particular membrane     specifically relative to whether the solutes do or do not cross    the membrane. Cell membranes are the membranes of greatest    biological significance. Whether a cell shrinks or swells in a    solution is determined by the tonicity of the solution, not    necessarily the osmolality. Only when all the solutes do not    cross the semi-permeable membrane does osmolality provide a    quantitative measure of tonicity. It is common to speak as if    tonicity and osmolality are equivalent because body fluid    solutes are often impermeable. Each mOsm\/kgH2O of    fluid contributes about 19mmHg to the osmotic pressure.  <\/p>\n<p>    A solution is said to be isotonic if cells neither    shrink nor swell in that solution. Both 0.9%NaCl    (physiological saline) and 5%glucose (in the absence of    insulin) are isotonic solutions (roughly    300mOsm\/kgH2O of impermeable solute). (In the    presence of insulin, 5%glucose is a hypotonic solution    because insulin causes glucose to cross cell membranes.)    Hypertonic solutions cause cells to shrink as water    rushes out of cells into the solute, whereas cells placed in    hypotonic solutions cause the cells to swell as water    from the solution rushes into the cells.  <\/p>\n<p>    An exact calculation of the osmolality of plasma gives    308mOsm\/kgH2O, but the freezing point    depression of plasma (0.54C) indicates an osmolality of    286mOsm\/kgH2O. Interaction of ions reduces the    effective osmolality. Sodium ions (Na+) and    accompanying anions (mostly Cl &    HCO3) account for all but about    20mOsm\/kgH2O of plasma osmolality. Plasma    sodium concentration is normally controlled by plasma water    content (thirst, etc.)[BMJ; Reynolds,RM; 332:702-705 (2006)].    Normal serum Na+ concentration is in the 135 to    145millimole per liter range, with 135mmol\/L being    the threshold for hyponatremia. Intracellular sodium concentration    is typically about 20mmol\/L  about one-seventh the    extracellular concentration. Glucose and urea account for about    5mOsm\/kgH2O. Osmolality of plasma is generally    approximated by doubling the sodium ions (to include all    associated anions), adding this to glucose & urea    molecules, and ignoring all other molecules as being    negligible. Protein contributes to less than 1% of the    osmolality of plasma. (Cells contain about four times the    concentration of proteins as plasma contains.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Although ethanol increases the osmolality of a    solution, it does not increase the tonicity    because (like water) ethanol crosses cell membranes. A clinical    hyperosmolar state without hypertonicity can occur with an    increase in extracellular ethanol (which diffuses into    cells)[ MINERVA ANESTESIOLOGICA; Offenstadt,G;    72(6):353-356 (2006)]. Glycerol also readily crosses cell    membranes, but it does so thousands of times more slowly than    water  which means that glycerol is \"transiently hypertonic\"    (only isotonic at equilibrium). Ethylene glycol crosses red    blood cell membranes about six times faster than glycerol (and    sperm cell membranes four times faster than glycerol).    Actually. even for water there is a finite time for hydraulic conductivity across cell membranes.  <\/p>\n<p>    Cells placed in a \"transiently hypertonic\" solution (containing    solutes that slowly cross a membrane) will initially shrink    rapidly as water leaves the cell, and gradually re-swell as the    solute slowly enters the cell (the \"shrink\/swell    cycle\"). As shown in the diagram for mouse oocytes at 10C,    water leaves the cell in the first 100seconds, whereas    1.5Molar ethylene glycol (black squares) or DMSO    (DiMethylSulfOxide, white squares) take 1,750seconds to    restore the volume to 85% of the original cell    volume[CRYOBIOLOGY; Paynter,SJ; 38:169-176 (1999)]. Even    if a cell does not burst or collapse due to osmotic imbalance,    a sudden change in osmotic balance can injure cells.    Nonetheless, cells are somewhat tolerant of hypotonic    solutions. Granulocytes are particularly sensitive to    osmotic stress, but granulocyte survival is not significantly    affected by hypertonic solutions until the osmolality of    impermeant solutes approaches twice physiological values (about    600mOsm\/kgH2O)[AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Armitage WJ;    247(5Pt1):C373-381 (1984)].  <\/p>\n<p>    PC3    cells show almost no decline of survival upon exposure to    5,000mOsm\/kgH2O NaCl for 60minutes at    0C, and show nearly 85% cell survival on rehydration. Nearly    85% survive 9,000mOsm\/kgH2O NaCl for    60minutes at 0C, but less than 20% survive rehydration.    But although at 23C most cells survive exposure to    5,000mOsm\/kgH2O NaCl for 60minutes, only    about a third of cells survive rehydration. At 23C and    9,000mOsm\/kgH2O NaCl only about half of cells    survive 60 minutes and no cells survive rehydration, indicating    the protective effect of low temperature against osmotic    stress. Water flux at 23C was the same for    9,000mOsm\/kgH2O as for    5,000mOsm\/kgH2O, and hypertonic cell survival    was not affected by the rate of concentration    increase[CRYOBIOLOGY; Zawlodzka,S; 50(1):58-70 (2005)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Hyperosmotic stress damages not only cell membranes, but    damages cytoskeleton, inhibits DNA replication &    translation, depolarizes mitochondria, and causes damage to DNA    & protein. Heat shock proteins and organic osmolytes (like    sorbitol & taurine) are synthesized as protection against    hyperosmotic stress. Highly proliferative cells (like PC3)    suffer from osmotic stress more than less proliferative cells    because the latter can mobilize cellular defenses more readily    due to fewer cells undergoing mitosis at the time of osmotic    stress[PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS; Burg,MB; 87(4):1441-1474    (2007)].  <\/p>\n<p>    An important distinction to remember in replacing body fluids    is the distinction between two kinds of swelling    (edema): cell swelling and tissue    swelling. Cell swelling occurs when there is a lower    concentration of dissolved membrane-impermeable solutes outside    cells than inside cells. To prevent either shrinkage or    swelling of a cell there must be an osmotic balance of    molecules & ions between the liquids outside the cell &    inside the cell. Capillary walls are semipermeable membranes    that are permeable to most of the small molecules & ions    that will not cross cell membranes, but are impermeant to large    molecules referred to as colloid (proteins). The colloid    osmotic pressure on capillary walls due to proteins is called    oncotic pressure. For normal human plasma oncotic    pressure is about 28mmHg, 9mmHg of which is due to    the Donnan effect  which causes small anions    to diffuse more readily than small cations because the small    cations are attracted-to (but not bound-to) the anionic    proteins. About 60% of total plasma protein is albumin (30 to 50 grams per liter), the rest being    globulins. But albumin accounts for 75-80% of total    intravascular oncotic pressure. Tissue swelling occurs    when fluids leak out of blood vessels into the interstitial    space (the space between cells in tissues). Injury to blood    vessels can result in tissue swelling, but tissue swelling can    also result from water leaking out of vessels when there is    nothing (like albumin) to prevent the leakage.  <\/p>\n<p>    Both forms of edema (cell & tissue swelling) can impede    perfusion considerably, and is frequently a problem in cryonics    patients who have suffered ischemic or other forms of blood vessel damage.    Maintaining osmotic balance of the fluids outside    & inside cells is as important as maintaining oncotic    balance, ie, balance of fluids inside & outside of    blood vessels.  <\/p>\n<p>    Much of the isotonicity of the intracellular and extracellular    fluids is maintained by the sodium pump in cell membranes,    which exports 3sodium ions for every 2potassium    ions imported into cells. Proteins in cells are more    osmotically active than interstitial fluid proteins. Because of    the Donnan effect the sodium pump is required to prevent cell    swelling. When ischemia deprives the sodium pump of energy,    cells swell from excessive intracellular sodium (because sodium    attracts water more than potassium does)  resulting in edema.    Inflammation can also cause cell swelling due to increased    membrane permeability to sodium and other ions. Interstitial    edema can occur when ischemia or inflammation increases    capillary permeability leading to leakage of larger plasma    solutes into the interstitial space.  <\/p>\n<p>    [For further details on the sodium pump see MEMBRANE POTENTIAL,    K\/Na-RATIOS AND VIABILITY]  <\/p>\n<p>    Near the hypothalamus of the brain are osmoreceptors (outside    the blood-brain barrier) that monitor blood osmolality, which    is normally in the range of 280-295mOsm\/kgH2O.    A 2% increase in plasma osmotic pressure can provoke thirst. An    increase in plasma osmolality can indicate excessive loss of    blood volume. To compensate, the posterior pituitary    (neurohypophysis) secretes the hormone 8arginine    vasopressin (AVP), which is two hormones in one     hence the two names vasopressin and anti-diuretic    hormone. AVP action on the V1 receptors on blood    vessels causes vasoconstriction (vasopressin). AVP action on    the V2 receptors of the kidney causes water    retention (anti-diuretic hormone). Deficiency in AVP secretion    can lead to diabetes incipidus, so called because the    excessively excreted urine is tasteless (incipid), in contrast    to the sweet (glucose-laden) urine of diabetes mellitus.    Cortisol opposes AVP action on excretion, leading to    dehydration and excessive urination of fluid. Reduced blood    flow to the kidney stimulates release of renin, which catalyzes    the production of angiotensin. Like AVP, angiotensin    causes vasoconstriction and kidney fluid retention.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rats subjected to experimental focal ischemia have shown    reduced edema when treated with an AVP    antagonist[STROKE; Shuaib,A; 33(12):3033-3037 (2002)].    Hypertonic saline(7.5%) has been shown to halve plasma    AVP levels in experimental rats, whereas mannitol(20%)    had no effect[JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY; Chang,Y;    100(5):1445-1451 (2006)]. Increases in plasma osmolality    due to urea or glycerol have no effect on plasma AVP    levels[JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY;    Verbalis,JG; 18(12):3056-3059 (2007)]. The effect of    hypertonic saline on osmotic edema due to AVP in a cryonics    patient would likely be negligible because of negligible    hormone release and transport. So some of the advantage of    hypertonic saline over mannitol seen in clinical trials would    not occur in cryonics cases.  <\/p>\n<p>    The net movement of fluid across capillary membranes due to    hydrostatic and oncotic forces can be described by the Starling equation. The Starling equation gives net    fluid flow across capillary walls as a result of the excess of    capillary hydrostatic pressure over interstitial fluid    hydrostatic pressure, and capillary oncotic pressure over    interstitial fluid oncotic pressure  modified by the water    permeability of the capillary. For a normal (animate) person,    the hydrostatic pressure (blood pressure) at the arterial end    of a capillary is about 35mmHg. The hydrostatic pressure    drops in a linear fashion across the length of the capillary    until it is about 15mmHg at the venule end. The net    oncotic pressure within the capillary is about 25mmHg    across the entire length of the capillary. Thus, for the first    half of the capillary there is a net loss of fluid into the    interstitial space until the hydrostatic pressure has dropped    to 25mmHg. For the second half of the capillary there is    a net gain of fluid into the capillary from the interstitial    space. The flow of fluid into the interstitial space in the    first half of the capillary is associated with the delivery of    oxygen & nutrient to the tissues, whereas the flow of fluid    from the interstitial space into the second half of the    capillary is associated with the removal of carbon dioxide and    other waste products.  <\/p>\n<p>    Actually, there is a tiny (tiny relative to the total diffusion    back and forth across the capillary wall) net flow of fluid    from the capillaries to the interstitial fluid  which is    returned to the blood vessels by the lymphatic system. The    lymphatic vessels contain one-way valves and rely on skeletal    muscle movement to propel the lymphatic fluid. Infectious    blockage of lymph flow can produce edema. A person sitting for    long periods (as during a long trip) or standing a long time    without moving may experience swollen ankles due to the lack of    muscle activity. Swollen ankles is also a frequent symptom of    the edema resulting from congestive heart failure. Venous    pressure is elevated by the reduced ability of the heart to    pull blood from the venous system, whereas vasoconstriction can    better compensate to maintain pressure on the arterial side.    Reduced albumin production by the liver as a result of    cirrhosis or other liver diseases can reduce plasma osmolality    such that the reduced oncotic pressure results in edema     typically swollen ankles, pulmonary edema and abdomenal edema    (ascites).  <\/p>\n<p>    The Starling forces are different for the blood-brain barrier (BBB) than they are for    other capillaries of the body because of the reduced    permeability to water (lower hydraulic conductivity) and the    greatly reduced permeability to electrolytes. The osmotic    pressure of the plasma and interstitial fluid effectively    become the oncotic pressures.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    A critical distinction is made in fluid mechanics between    laminar flow and turbulent flow in a pipe. For laminar    flow elements of a liquid follow straight streamlines,    where the velocity of a streamline is highest in the center of    the vessel and slowest close to the walls. Turbulent    flow is characterized by eddies & chaotic motion which    can substantially increase resistance and reduce flow rate. The    Reynolds number is an empirically determined dimensionless    quantity which is used to predict whether flow will be laminar    or turbulent  with 2000 being the approximate lower limit for    turbulent flow. Transient localized turbulence can be induced    at a Reynolds number as low as 1600, but temporally peristant    turbulence forms above 2040[SCIENCE; Eckhart,B; 333:165 (2011)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Turbulent flow could potentially be a problem in cryonics if it    reduced perfusion rate or increased the amount of pressure required to    maintain a perfusion rate. It is doubtful that turbulent flow    ever plays a role in cryonics perfusion, however. Even for a    subject at body temperature (37C) Reynolds numbers in excess of 2000 are only    seen in the very largest blood vessels: the aorta and the vena cava.  <\/p>\n<p>    The formula for Reynolds number is:            v D     Re = ------                  =    fluid density (rho)     v =    fluid velocity     D = vessel    diameter      =    fluid viscosity  <\/p>\n<p>    The fact that diameter (D) is in the numerator indicates that    only high diameter vessels have high Reynolds number. Velocity    (v), also in the numerator, is highest in the aorta &    arteries. But the use of cryoprotectants and the increase in    viscosity () with declining temperature essentially guarantee    that turbulent flow will not occur in a cryonics patient.  <\/p>\n<p>    More serious for cryonics is the Hagen-Poisseuille Law, which describes the    relationship between flow-rate and driving-pressure:                pressure X (radius)4     Flow Rate =    ----------------------            length X viscosity  <\/p>\n<p>    Typically in cryonics the flow rate will be one or two liters    per minute when the pressure is around 80mmHg. But    because flow rate varies inversely with viscosity and varies    directly with pressure, pressure must be increased to maintain    flow rates when cryoprotectant viscosity increases with    lowering temperature. This poses a serious problem because    blood vessels become more fragile with lowering temperature. If    blood vessels burst the perfusion can fail.  <\/p>\n<p>    At 20C glycerol is about 25% more dense (=rho, in the    numerator) than water. But the role of viscosity is far more    dramatic, with high viscosity in the denominator reducing    Reynolds number considerably. The viscosity of water    approximately doubles from 37C to 10C, but the viscosity of    glycerol increases by a factor of ten (roughly 4Poise to    40Poise). At 37C glycerol is nearly 600 times more    viscous than water, but at 10C it is about 2,600 times more    viscous.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although turbulence is not a concern in cryonics, the increase    in viscosity of cryoprotectant with lowering temperature    certainly is. Fortunately, the newer vitrification mixtures are less viscous    than glycerol.  <\/p>\n<p>    The most common strategy in cryonics has been to cool the    patient from 37C to 10C as rapidly as possible and to perfuse    with cryoprotectant at 10C. Lowering body temperature reduces    metabolism considerably, thereby lessening the amount of oxygen    & nutrient required to keep tissues alive. Cryoprotectant toxicity    drops as temperature declines. But the very dramatic    more-than-exponential increase in cryoprotectant viscosity with    lowering temperature poses a significant problem for effective    perfusion. When open circuit perfusion is used, a higher    temperature may be preferable because the opportunity for    diffusion time into cells is so limited (about 2hours     1hour for the head, 1hour for the body)  although    ischemic damage    is difficult to quantify.  <\/p>\n<p>    With closed circuit    perfusion, the perfusion times are longer  up to    5hours. If a good carrier solution is used for the    cryoprotectant the tissues may receive adequate nutrient. This,    along with the oxygen carrying-capacity of water at low    temperature, may limit ischemic damage while allowing time for    cells to become fully loaded with cryoprotectant. If ischemic    damage can be safely prevented in perfusion, the only critical    issues for temperature selection are the relative benefits of    reduced cryoprotectant toxicity at lower temperatures as    against increased chilling injury. The fact that the    more-than-exponential increase in viscosity with lowering    temperature will increase perfusion time will not be    problematic if the risk of ischemia is minimized.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Typically a cryonics patient    deanimates at a considerable distance from a cryonics facility    and must be transported before cryoprotectants can be perfused.    Blood could be washed-out and replaced with an isotonic (ie,    osmotically the same as saline) solution, such as Ringer's    solution. The patient is then transported to the cryonics    facility at water-ice temperature. Freezing must be avoided    because ice crystals would damage cells & blood vessels to    such an extent as to prevent effective cryoprotectant    perfusion. Water-ice temperature will not freeze tissues    because tissues are salty (salt lowers the freezing point below    0C).  <\/p>\n<p>    As body temperature approaches 10C, metabolic rate has slowed    greatly and the oxygen-carrying capacity of blood hemoglobin is    no longer required. Cool water, in fact, may carry adequate    dissolved oxygen at low temperatures.    (Water near freezing temperature can hold nearly three times as    much dissolved oxygen as water near boiling temperature. Oxygen    is about five times more soluble in water than nitrogen.) The    tendency of blood to agglutinate and clog blood vessels becomes    a serious problem at low temperature  so the blood should be    replaced if this does not cause other problems (such as delay    and reperfusion injury.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Replacing blood with a saline-like solution for patient    transport, however, does not do a good job of maintaining    tissue viability or preventing edema and would likely cause    reperfusion injury. For this reason an organ preservation    solution such as Viaspan, rather than Ringer's    solution, has been used for cryopatient transport. Blood is not    simply an isotonic solution carrying blood cells. Blood    contains albumin, which attracts water and keeps the water from    leaving blood vessels and going into tissues (maintains oncotic    balance). Tissues which are swollen by water (edematous    tissues) resist cryoprotectant perfusion. One of the most    important ingredients in Viaspan preventing edema is    HydroxyEthyl Starch (HES), which attracts water    in much the way albumin attracts water  acting as an oncotic    agent by keeping water in the blood vessels. Viaspan contains    potassium lactobionate to help maintain osmotic balance.    Because HES is difficult to obtain and can cause    microcirculatory disturbances, PolyEthylene    Glycol (PEG) has been used in organ preservation    solutions as a replacement for HES with good    results[THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL    THERAPEUTICS; Faure,J; 302(3):861-870 (2002) and LIVER    TRANSPLANTATION; Bessems,M; 11(11):1379-1388 (2005)].  <\/p>\n<p>    The same benefit might not apply to cryonics patients, however,    because of the prevalence of endothelial damage due to    ischemia. Larger \"holes\" in the vasculature can mean that a    larger molecular weight molecule is required for oncotic    support. HES molecular weight is about 500,000, whereas the    molecular weight for PEG used in organ replacement solutions is    more like 20,000. Albumin (which has a molecular weight of    about 70,000) provides most of the oncotic support in normal    physiology. A PEG with molecular weight of 500,000 would be far    too viscous and will form a gel. HES has the benefit of being    large enough to always provide oncotic support while being much    less viscous than PEG of equivalent molecular weight.  <\/p>\n<p>    Viaspan (DuPont Merck Pharmaceuticals) contains other    ingredients to maintain tissue viability, such as glucose,    glutathione, etc. (the full formula can be found on the    Viaspan    website). Viaspan is FDA approved for preservation of    liver, kidney & pancreas, but is used off-label for heart    & lung transplants. Viaspan is being challenged in the    marketplace for all these applications by the Hypothermosol (Cryomedical Sciences, BioLife    Technologies) line of preservation solutions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rather than use these expensive commercial products, Alcor and Suspended    Animation, Inc. use a preservation solution developed by    Jerry Leaf & Mike Darwin called MHP-2. MHP-2 is    so-called because it is a Perfusate (P) which contains mannitol    (M) as an extracellular osmotic agent and HEPES (H), a buffer    to prevent acidosis which is effective at low temperature.    MHP-2 also contains ingredients to maintain tissue viability    and hydroxyethyl starch as an oncotic agent to prevent edema.    Lactobionate permeates cells less than mannitol and can thus    maintain osmotic balance for longer periods of time, but    mannitol is much less expensive. Mannitol also has an    additional effect in the brain. Because of the unique tightness    of brain capillary endothelial cell junctions (\"blood brain    barrier\"), little mannitol leaves blood vessels to pass into    the brain. This means that mannitol can act like an oncotic    agent for the brain. If the blood brain barrier is intact,    mannitol will suck water out of the extravascular space. The    brain is the only place that mannitol can do this, and that is    why a mannitol is effective for inhibiting edema of the brain     but only if there is not extensive ischemic    damage to the blood brain barrier. (Mannitol has yet another    benefit in that it scavenges hydroxyl radical [CHEM.-BIOL.    INTERACTIONS 72:229-255 (1989)]).  <\/p>\n<p>    (For the formula of MHP-2 see TableII of CryoMsg4474 or TableVII of CryoMsg2874  which also    contains the formula for Viaspan in TableV.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The initial perfusate can also contain other ingredients to    assist in reducing damage to the cryonics patient.    Anticoagulants can reduce clotting problems, and antibiotics    can reduce bacterial damage. Damaging effects of ischemia can    be reduced with antioxidants, antiacidifiers, an iron chelator    and a calcium channel blocker.  <\/p>\n<p>    Both Alcor    and Suspended Animation, Inc. use an Air Transportable    Perfusion(ATP) system of equipment which allows them to    do blood washout in locations remote from any cryonics facilty    by using equipment that can easily be carried on an airplane.    There is a video demonstration of an ATP on YouTube.  <\/p>\n<p>    [For further details on organ preservation solution see    ORGAN    TRANSPLANTATION SOLUTION]  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Cryoprotectants are used in cryonics to reduce freezing damage    by prevention of ice formation (see Vitrification in Cryonics ). Cells are much    more permeable to water than they are to cryoprotectant.    Platelets & granulocytes, for example, are 4,000 times more    permeable to water than they are to glycerol[CRYOBIOLOGY; Armitage,WJ; 23(2):116-125 (1986)].    When a cell is exposed to high-strength cryoprotectant, osmosis    causes water to rush out of the cells, causing the cells to    shrink. Only very gradually does the cryoprotectant cross cell    membranes to enter the cell (the \"shrink\/swell cycle\").    For isolated cells, the halftime (time to halve the difference    between a given glycerol concentration in a granulocyte and the    maximum possible concentration) is    1.3minutes[EXPERIMENTAL HEMATOLOGY; Dooley,DC; 10(5):423-434    (1982)]  but tissues & organs would require more time    because their cells are less accessible. Even after    equilibration, however, the concentration of glycerol inside    neutrophilic granulocytes never rises above 78% of the    concentration outside the cells.  <\/p>\n<p>    As shown in the diagram for mature human oocytes placed in a    1.5molar DMSO solution, the shrink\/swell cycle is highly    temperature dependent, happening with slower speed of recovery    and with greater volume change at lower    temperatures[HUMAN REPRODUCTION; Paynter,SJ; 14(9):2338-2342    (1999)]. This creates tough choices in cryonics, because    cryoprotectants are more toxic at higher temperatures.  <\/p>\n<p>    Proliferation of cultured kidney cells declines linearly with    increasing osmolality due to urea & NaCl above    300mOsm\/kgH2O, but the effect of added    glycerol on cell growth is much less[AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Michea,L;    278(2):F209-F218 (2000)]. Kidney cells which    invivo can tolerate osmolalities of around    300mOsm\/kgH2O do not survive over    300mOsm\/kgH2O invitro, possibly    because of more rapid proliferation[PHYSIOLOGICAL    REVIEWS; Burg,MB; 87(4):1441-1474 (2007)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Cells subjected to high levels of cryoprotectants can be    damaged by osmotic stress. Quantifying osmotic damage has been    a challenge for experimentalists who must distinguish between    electrolyte damage, cryoprotectant toxicity, cell volume    effects and osmotic stress. Concerning the last two, osmotic    damage due to cell shrinkage may be distinguished from osmotic    damage as a result of the speed at which the cryoprotectant    crosses the cell membrane, ie, by the membrane permeability to    the cryoprotectant. Cryoprotectants with lower permeabilities    can cause more osmotic stress than cryoprotectants with high    permeability.  <\/p>\n<p>    Membrane permeabilities of a variety of nonelectrolytes    (including cryoprotectants) have been studied on a number of    cell types, including human blood cells[THE    JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY; Naccache,P; 62(6):714-736    (1973)]. Critical factors determining membrane permeability    are lipid solubility of the substance (which increases    permeability) and hydrogen bonding (which decreases    permeability). In general, permeability decreases as the    molecular size of the substance increases. In contrast to blood    cells, human sperm is more than three times more permeable to    glycerol than to DMSO[BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION; Gilmore,JA; 53(5):985-995    (1995)]. For both blood cells and sperm cells permeability    to ethylene glycol is very high compared to the other common    cryoprotectants. Yet for mature human oocytes propylene glycol    has the highest permeability and ethylene glycol has the lowest    permeability of the most commonly used oocyte    cryoprotectants[HUMAN REPRODUCTION; Van den Abbeel,E;    22(7):1959-1972 (2007)]. In contrast to human oocytes,    however, for mouse oocytes ethylene glycol(EG)    permeability is comparable to that of DMSO, propylene    glycol(PG), and acetamide(AA), but not    glycerol(Gly)[JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT; Pedro,PB;    51(2):235-246 (2005)].<\/p>\n<p>    Water and cryoprotectants both cross cell membranes more slowly    at lower temperatures. Cryoprotectants slow the passage of    water across cell membranes. Glycerol, DMSO and ethylene glycol    all reduce the rate at which water crosses human sperm cell    membranes by more than half[BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION; Gilmore,JA; 53(5):985-995    (1995)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Aside from the choice of cryoprotectants, a major concern is    the way cryoprotectant is administered. For example, glycerol    (the standard cryoprotectant used in cryonics for many years)    can either be administered full-strength or it can be    introduced in gradually increasing concentrations. Under    optimum conditions, glycerol results in 80% vitrification and    20% ice formation. Glycerol has been replaced by better    cryoprotectants that can vitrify without any ice formation, but    I will typically use glycerol as my example cryoprotectant. A    patient should probably not be perfused with a 100% solution of    glycerol or other cryoprotectant because of the possibility of    osmotic damage. It is prudent to begin perfusion with low    concentrations of cryoprotectant because water can diffuse out    of cells thousands of times more rapidly than cryoprotectant    diffuses into cells. Using gradually increasing concentrations    of cryoprotectant (ramping) prevents the osmotic damage this    differential could cause.<\/p>\n<p>    Human granulocytes (which are more vulnerable to osmotic stress    or shrinkage than most other cell types) can experience up to    600mOsm\/kgH2O hypertonic solution (which    shrinks cells to 68% of normal cell volume) for 5minutes    at 0C with no more than 10% of the cells losing membrane    integrity. But at about 750mOsm\/kgH2O (NaCl)    or 950mOsm\/kgH2O (sucrose) less than half of    granulocytes display intact membranes when returned to isotonic    solution. Nonetheless, the cells did not display lysis if    retained in hyperosmotic medium. In fact, granulocytes could    tolerate up to 1400mOsm\/kgH2O if not    subsequently diluted to less than    600mOsm\/kgH2O[AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Armitage WJ;    247(5Pt1):C373-381 (1984)]. A subsequent    confirming study showed that rehydration of PC3    cells shrunken by NaCl solution creates more osmotic damage    than the initial dehydration[CRYOBIOLOGY; Zawlodzka,S; 50(1):58-70 (2005)].    Cell survival after rehydration was higher at 0C than at 23C.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although toxic effects of 2M (17%w\/w) glycerol on    granulocytes are quite evident at 22C, almost no toxic effect    is seen at 0C[CRYOBIOLOGY; Frim,J; 20(6):657-676    (1983)]. For no mammalian cells other than granulocytes is    2Molar glycerol toxic. Nonetheless, abrupt addition of    only 0.5Molar glycerol at 0C resulted in only 40% of    granulocytes surviving when slowly diluted to isotonic solution    and warmed to 37C. Only 20% of granulocytes survived this    treatment when 1Molar or 2Molar glycerol were added    (there was no difference in survival between the two    concentrations). But if sucrose or NaCl was added to keep the    granulocytes shrunken to 60% of normal cell volume, almost all    granulocytes survived when incubated to 37C. Insofar as the    transient shrinkage of granulocytes due to glycerol is not less    than 85% of normal cell volume, it seems unlikely that cell    shrinkage can account for the damage[AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Armitage WJ;    247(5Pt1):C382-389 (1984)].<\/p>\n<p>    Human spermatazoa tolerate much higher osmolality than    granulocytes. Sperm cells can experience up to    1000mOsm\/kgH2O hypertonic solution for    5minutes at 0C with no more than 10% of the cells losing    membrane integrity. At about 1500mOsm\/kgH2O    (NaCl, white circles) or 2500mOsm\/kgH2O    (sucrose, black circles) less than half of sperm cells display    intact membranes when returned to isotonic conditions. But 80%    of sperm cells showed intact cell membrane after exposure to    2500mOsm\/kgH2O at 0C if maintained at    hypertonicity rather than restored to isotonic solution (NaCl    & sucrose, triangles). Sperm cells gradually returned to    isotonic solution following exposure to 1.5Molar glycerol    at 22C showed only 3% lysis, whereas 20% of sperm cells lysed    if the return to isotonic was sudden. No lysis was seen for    sperm not returned to isotonic medium. At nearly    5000mOsm\/kgH2O glycerol (about 4.5Molar)    17% of sperm cells showed lysis (had loss of membrane    integrity) at 0C and 10% had lysis at 8C if not returned to    isotonic media[BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION; Gao,DY; 49(1):112-123    (1993)]. For cryonics purposes it would be best to maintain    cells in a hypertonic condition to maximize potential viability    during cryogenic storage.  <\/p>\n<p>    Cells from mouse kidney (IMCD, Inner Medullary Collecting Duct)    can be killed by NaCl or urea that is    700mOsm\/kgH2O, but the death is apoptotic and    takes up to 24hours. The IMCD cells can tolerate up to    900mOsm\/kgH2O of urea and NaCl in combination    because of activation of complementary cellular defenses    (including heat-shock protein)[ AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Santos,BC;    274(6):F1167-F1173 1998)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Nearly half of mouse fibroblasts displayed cell membrane lysis    after restoration to isotonicity following exposure to the    equivalent of 3600mOsm\/kgH2O of osmotic stress    from rapid addition of 4Molar (30%w\/w) DMSO at 0C. Few    cells were damaged by slow addition of the DMSO[BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL; Muldrew,K; 57(3):525-532    (1990)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Human corneal epithelial cells could tolerate 4.3M    (37%w\/w) glycerol with only 2% cell loss at 4C if the cells    were subjected to gradually increasing (ramped) concentration    (doubling osmolality in about 13minutes), but for stepped    increases of 0.5M every 5minutes above 2M    (17%w\/w) to 3.5M (30%w\/w) glycerol at 0C there was a 27%    cell loss. For the same ramped method with DMSO there was a 6%    cell loss at 2M (15%w\/w) and a 15% cell loss at 3M    (23%w\/w). The same stepped method for DMSO resulted in a 1.5%    cell loss for cells stepped from 2M to 3.5M    (27%w\/w) and a 22% cell loss for cells stepped from 2M to    4.3M (33%w\/w). In all cases cell viability was assessed    after washout and three days of incubation at    37C[CRYOBIOLOGY; Bourne,WM; 31(1):1-9 (1994)].    (Conversion of glycerol molarity to %w\/w was approximated by    multiplying by 8.6 and for DMSO was approximated by multiplying    by 7.6)  <\/p>\n<p>    In the context of cryonics it should be remembered that cells    are not being returned to body temperature and need not be    returned to isotonicity before cryoopreservation. There would    be little time for apoptosis, and most cells would be far    better preserved at low temperature and in hyperosmolar    solution. Future technologies may be able to prevent apoptosis    and have better methods for restoring irreplaceable cells to    normal temperatures and osmolalities. For neurons, even abrupt    stepped perfusion with cryoprotectant is likely to effectively    result in ramped perfusion when allowances are made for the    diffusion times required across blood vessels (blood brain    barrier) and interstitial space. A more worrisome effect from    the point of view of cryonic cryoprotectant perfusion is the    effect of the cryoprotectants on vessel endothelial cells     notably the effect on edema and vascular compliance.  <\/p>\n<p>    Cell shrinkage may directly damage the cell (and cell membrane)    due to structural resistance from the cell cytoskeleton and    high compression of other cell constituents[HUMAN REPRODUCTION; Gao,DY; 10(5):1109-1122    (1995)]. Aside from membrane damage, other forms of    cellular damage occur due to hypertonic environments, including    cross-linking of intracellular proteins subsequent to cell    dehydration. Bull sperm lose motility (often only temporarily)    in a less hypertonic medium than one causing membrane    damage[JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE; Liu,Z; 81(7):1868-1873    (1998)]. Osmotic stress can depress mitochondrial membrane    potential in a manner that is mostly reversible after    restoration to isotonic conditions[PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (USA);    Desai,BN; 99(7):4319-4324 (2002)]. Human oocytes subjected    to 600mOsm\/kgH2O sucrose showed 44% of    metaphaseII spindles having abnormalities[HUMAN REPRODUCTION; Mullen,SF; 19(5):1148-1154    (2004)]. Hypertonic solutions can trigger    apoptosis[AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY; Copp,J;    288(2):C403-C415 (2005)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Despite these other types of damage due to hyperosmolality, the    greatest risks in cryoprotectant perfusion in cryonics are    those associated with membrane damage and edema due to cell    swelling. The evidence that maintaining hypertonicity is more    protective of cells than returning to isotonic conditions, and    the desire to minimize edema during perfusion seem to make it    advisable in cryonics to perfuse in hypertonic conditions.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Once the patient is at the cryonics facility the transport    solution can be replaced with a cryoprotectant solution. A    perfusion temperature of 10C gives the best tradeoff of    avoiding the high viscosity of lower temperatures and at the    same time limiting the ischemic tissue degradation, chilling injury,    and cryoprotectant toxicity that would be seen at    higher temperatures. (Cryonicists usually worry more about    ischemic damage than cryoprotectant toxicity due to a belief    that ischemic damage has a greater likelihood of being    irreversible  irreparable by future molecular-repair    technology.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Cryoprotectants should be sterilized to prevent the growth of    bacteria. Sterilization of cryoprotectants by heating can cause    the formation of carbon-carbon double-bonds, which are evident    by a yellowing of the cryoprotectant. Only a few such    double-bonds can produce the yellow appearance, so the fact of    yellowing is not evidence that the cryoprotectant is no longer    serviceable. But a preferable method of cryoprotectant    sterilization is filtration through a 0.2micron filter.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rapid addition of cryoprotectant causes endothelial cells to    shrink  thereby breaking the junctions between the    cells[CRYOBIOLOGY; Pollock,GA,; 23(6):500-511    (1986)]. On the other hand, endothelial cell shrinkage by    hypertonic perfusate can increase capillary volume, thereby    increasing blood flow  as long as excessive vascular damage    does not occur. Blood and clots are often observed to be    dislodged during cryoprotectant perfusion in cryonics cases. For cryonics purposes some    vascular damage may actually be an advantage insofar as it    increases diffusion  and vascular repair may be an easy task    for future science. In fact, the breakdown of the blood-brain    barrier in the 1.8-2.2 molar glycerol range is essential for    perfusion of the brain  as long as damaging tissue edema    (swelling) can be avoided. Aquaporin (water channel) expression in the    blood-brain barrier could be a safer means of allowing    cryoprotectants into the brain[CRYOBIOLOGY; Yamaji,Y;    53(2):258-267 (2006)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Closed-circuit perfusion (with perfusion solution    following a circuit both inside & outside the patient's    body) is contrasted with the open-circuit perfusion used    by funeral directors for embalming. In the open-circuit    perfusion of embalming, fluid is pumped into a large artery of    the corpse and forces-out blood from a large vein  and this    blood is discarded.  <\/p>\n<p>    A closed-circuit perfusion, as illustrated in the diagram, can    be set up at low cost for gradual introduction of    cryoprotectant into cryonics patients. As shown in the diagram,    the perfusion circuit bypasses the heart. Perfusate enters the    patient through a cannula in the femoral (leg) artery and exits    from a cannula in the femoral vein on the same leg. Flowing    upwards (opposite from the usual direction) from the femoral    artery and up through the descending aorta, the perfusate    enters the arch of the aorta (where blood normally exits the    heart), but is blocked from entering the heart. Instead, the    perfusate flows (in the usual direction) through the    distribution arteries of the aorta, notably to the head and    brain. Returning in the veins (in the usual direction), the    perfusate nontheless again bypasses the heart and flows    downward (opposite from the usual direction) to the femoral    vein where it exits. A better alternative to the femoral    circuit, however, is to surgically open the chest to cannulate    the heart aorta (for input) and atrium (for output).<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>    Although it is not shown in the diagram, there will be a pump    in the circuit to maintain pressure and fluid movement. A    roller pump, rather than an embalmer's pump, should be    used. A roller pump achieves pumping action by the use of    rollers on the exterior of flexible tubing that    forces fluids through the tube without contaminating those    fluids. Embalmer's pumps may use pressures much higher than    those suitable for cryonics, resulting in blood vessel damage.    Embalmer's pumps are also easily contaminated (and hard to    clean), unless a filter is used. Contamination doesn't matter    much in embalming, but in cryonics contaminants entering the    patient through the pump can damage blood vessels, interfering    with perfusion. If an embalmer's pump is used for cryonics    purposes, ensure that the pressure can be lowered to a suitable    level and that it is cleaned and sterilized. The main advantage    of roller pumps, however, is the fact that they provide a    closed circuit, whereas embalmer's pumps are open-circuit.    Roller pumps are generally calibrated in litres per minute.    Depending on the viscosity of the solution, a flow rate of 0.5    to 1.5litres per minute will be necessary to achieve the    desired perfusion pressure of approximately 80mmHg to    120mmHg (physiological pressures).  <\/p>\n<p>    Gaseous and particulate microemboli can produce ischemia in    capillaries and arterioles. A study of patients having routine    cardiopulmonary bypass surgery showed that 16% fewer patients    had neuropsychological deficits eight weeks after the surgery    when a 40micrometer arterial line filer had been    used[STROKE; Pugsley,W; 25(7):1393-1399 (1994)]. Both    roller pumps (peristaltic pumps) and centrifugal pumps can generate particles up to    25micrometers in diameter through spallation, although centrifugal pumps generate    fewer particles[PERFUSION; Merkle,F;    18(suppl1):81-88 (2003)]. Filtration of perfusate with a    0.2micrometer filter prior to perfusion is a recommended    way of removing potential microemboli, including bacteria. At    room temperature 20micrometer diameter air bubbles take    1to6seconds to dissolve in water, although    high flow rates and turbulence can increase microbubble    formation[SEMINARS IN DIALYSIS; Barak,M; 21(3):232-238    (2008)]. De-airing of tubing before perfusion considerably    reduces the possibility of microbubbles entering the    patient[THE THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGEON; Stock,UA;    54(1):39-41 (2006)].  <\/p>\n<p>    Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) for an normal adult is    regarded as being in the range of 50 to 150mmHg, and    Cerebral Perfusion Pressure (CPP) is in the same    range[BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAETHESIA; Steiner,LA;    91(1):26-38 (2006)]. Vascular pressure normally drops to about    40mmHg in the arterioles, to below 30mmHg entering    the capillaries, and is down to 3 to 6mmHg (Central    Venous Pressure, CVP) when returning to the right atrium of    the heart. Perfusing a cryonics patient at about 120mmHg    should open capillaries adequately for good cryoprotectant    tissue saturation without damaging fragile blood vessels.  <\/p>\n<p>    Outside the patient, some of the drainage is discarded, but    most is returned to a circulating (stirred) reservoir connected    to a concentrated reservoir of cryoprotectant. The circulating    reservoir is initially carrier solution which    gradually becomes increasingly concentrated with cryoprotectant    as the stirring and recirculation proceed. The circulating    reservoir can be stirred from the bottom by a magnetic stir bar    on a stir table and\/or from the top by an eggbeater-type    stirring device. The stirring will draw cryoprotectant from the    cryoprotectant reservoir, and pumping of the perfusate should    also actively draw liquid from the cryoprotectant reservoir.    Gradually a higher and higher concentration of cryoprotectant    is included in the perfusate and the osmotic shock of    full-strength cryoprotectant is avoided.  <\/p>\n<p>    The carrier solution for the cryoprotectant    should perform similar tissue preservation functions as is    performed by the transport solution, and should be carefully    mixed with the cryoprotectant so as to avoid deviations from    isotonicity which could result in dehydration or swelling &    bursting of cells. The carrier solution will help keep cells    alive during cryoprotectant perfusion.  <\/p>\n<p>    An excellent carrier solution for cryonics purposes would be    RPS-2 (Renal Preservation Solution number2), which    was developed by Dr. Gregory Fahy in 1981 as a result of    studies on kidney slices. More recently Dr. Fahy used RPS-2 as    the carrier solution in cryopreserving hippocampal slices  an indication    that it is well-suited for brain tissue as well as for kidney.    RPS-2 not only helps maintain hippocampal slice viability, it    reduces the amount of cryoprotectant needed because it has    cryoprotectant (colligative) properties of its own. The    formulation of RPS-2 is: K2HPO4, 7.2mM;    reduced glutathione, 5mM; adenine HCl, 1mM; dextrose, 180mM;    KCl, 28.2mM; NaHCO3, 10mM; plus calcium &    magnesium[CRYOBIOLOGY; Fahy,GM; 27(5):492-510    (1990)]. LM5 (Lactose-Mannitol5) is a carrier    solution for use in vitrification solutions that include    ice    blockers. LM5 does not contain dextrose, which is believed    to interfere with ice blockers.  <\/p>\n<p>    The cryoprotectant reservoir will not in general contain pure    cryoprotectant (although in principle it could), but rather a    \"terminal concentration\" solution of cryoprotectant that is    equal or slightly above the final target concentration. As    perfusion proceeds and drainage to discard proceeds, the level    of both reservoirs drops in tandem until both reservoirs are    nearly empty, at which point the circuit concentration will    have reached the cryoprotectant reservoir concentration.    Provided that the two reservoirs are the same size and same    vertical elevation, the gradient will be linear over time (if    the drainage rate to discard was constant).  <\/p>\n<p>    For cryoprotectant to perfuse into cells there must be constant    exposure to cryoprotectant surrounding the cells  and there    must be pressure to maintain that exposure. In a living animal    the heart maintains blood pressure that forces blood through    the capillaries and forces nutrients into cells. A dead animal    with no blood pressure  and which is being perfused with    cryoprotectant  also requires pressure for the capillaries to    remain open and for cryoprotectant to be maintained at high    concentrations around cells.  <\/p>\n<p>    Alcor found    that closed-circuit perfusion must be maintained for 5-7 hours    for full equilibration of glycerol, because the diffusion rate    of water out of cells is thousands of times the rate at which    glycerol enters cells. Of course, it would be possible to pump    glycerol into a patient for 5-7 hours with open-circuit    perfusion, but only by using thousands of dollars worth of    glycerol. The newer vitrification cryoprotectants used by Alcor    are vastly more expensive than glycerol. When using expensive    cryoprotectants it makes far more sense to recirculate in a    closed circuit. Closed-circuit perfusion also has the benefit    of allowing for ongoing monitoring of physiological changes    occurring in the patient's body during the perfusion process.    Open-circuit with an inexpensive cryoprotectant has the    advantage of avoiding recirculation of toxins.  <\/p>\n<p>    Cryoprotectants, particularly glycerol, are viscous  and    cryoprotectants in high concentration are particularly viscous.    The introduction of air bubbles into cryoprotectant solutions    during pouring and mixing should be avoided because air emboli    that enter the cryonics patient can block perfusion.    Elimination of air bubbles from viscous cryoprotectant    solutions is extremely difficult. Prevention is more effective    than cure. Cryonicist Mike Darwin wrote about this problem and    possible solutions in a 1994 CryoNet message.  <\/p>\n<p>    Improper mixing of perfusate containing high levels of    cryoprotectant can result in a phenomenon that    appears to be high viscosity, but in reality is    edema. If, for example, isotonic carrier solution is mixed    half-and-half with cryoprotectant solution an open circuit    perfusion may have to be halted when no further perfusate will    go into the patient. The problem is caused not by viscosity,    but by the fact that the isotonic solution became hypotonic due    to dilution with cryoprotectant  causing the cells to swell    and forcing perfusion to end. In closed-circuit perfusion, the    cryoprotectant concentrate reservoir contains cryoprotectant at    about 125% the terminal concentration in a vehicle of isotonic    carrier solution so that when reservoir concentrate is mixed    with isotonic carrier there is no change in tonicity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Newer cryoprotectants are less viscous than glycerol, so    perfusions can be done in less time. After 15 minutes of    perfusion with carrier solution, cryoprotectant concentration    linearly increases at a rate of 50millimolar per minute    until full concentration is reached  in about two hours (a    protocol developed on the basis of minimizing osmotic damage    when perfusing kidneys). Perfusion is increased for an    additional hour or two until the cryoprotectant has fully    diffused into cells (as indicated by similarity of afflux and    efflux cryoprotectant concentrations).  <\/p>\n<p>    Only after a few hours of closed-circuit perfusion is the    concentration of cryoprotectant exiting the cryonics patient    equal to the concentration of cryoprotectant entering the    patient. Only an extended period of sustained pressure will    keep capillaries open, and otherwise facilitate diffusion of    cryoprotectant into cells. And the exiting cryoprotectant    concentration will equal the entering cryoprotectant    concentration only when the tissues are fully loaded with    cryoprotectant. A refractometer is used to verify that terminal    cryoprotectant concentration has been reached in the brain.  <\/p>\n<p>    (A refractometer measures the index of    refraction of a liquid, ie, the ratio of the speed of light    in the liquid and the speed of light in a vacuum (or air).    Light changes speed when it strikes the boundary of two media,    thus causing a change in angle if it strikes the new medium at    an angle. Because the refractive index is a ratio of two    quantities having the same units, it is unitless. Sodium vapor    in an electric arc produces an excitation between the 3s and 3p    orbitals resulting in yellow-orange light of 589nm  what    Joseph Fraunhofer called the \"Dline\". Insofar as the    sodium \"Dline\" was the first convenient source of    monochromatic light, it became the standard for refractometry.    The refractive index of a liquid is thus a high-precision    5-digit number between 1.3000 and 1.7000 at a specific    temperature, measured at the sodium Dline wavelength. For    example, the refractive index of glycerol at 25C     nD25  is 1.4730.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Closed-circuit perfusion may be necessary for removal of water    as well as loading of cryoprotectant if it is true that    open-circuit perfusion cannot remove water effectively.  <\/p>\n<p>    One could imagine that the additional time spent doing    closed-circuit (rather than open-circuit) perfusion means    increased damage due to above-zero temperature. But most cells    are still alive and metabolizing very slowly at 10C. Viaspan,    RPS-2 and other organ preservation solutions are designed to    keep tissues alive for extended periods at near-zero    temperatures  certainly for the time required for    closed-circuit perfusion. Ramping (slowly increasing    concentration) of cryoprotectant should be done in such a way    that the ion and mannitol or lactobionate concentration remains    unchanged in the perfusate. Ramping is not an osmotically    neutral process, however, because cryoprotectant is expected to    dehydrate tissues.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Follow this link:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.benbest.com\/cryonics\/protocol.html\" title=\"Perfusion &amp; Diffusion in Cryonics Protocol - BEN BEST\">Perfusion &amp; Diffusion in Cryonics Protocol - BEN BEST<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> by Ben Best CONTENTS: LINKS TO SECTIONS BY TOPIC Preparing a cryonics patient for cryostorage can involve three distinct stages of alteration of body fluids: (1) patient cooldown\/cardiopulmonary support (2) blood washout\/replacement for patient transport (3) cryoprotectant perfusion During patient cooldown\/cardiopulmonary support, a cryonics emergency response team or health care personnel may inject a number of medicaments to minimize ischemic injury and facilitate cryopreservation. The first and most important of these medicaments would be heparin, to prevent blood clotting. (For more details on the initial cooldown process, see Emergency Preparedness for a Local Cryonics Group) <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/perfusion-diffusion-in-cryonics-protocol-ben-best\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187739],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-69223","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-cryonics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/69223"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=69223"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/69223\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=69223"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=69223"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=69223"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}