Results 21 - 30 of 249 | Search Time 0.109 Seconds |
Msg | Description |
# 29650 | newsweek on low temps to save heart attack vics [un person] |
always with precision. He wasn't yet "brain
dead," implying a permanent cessation of cerebral
. . . the hundred billion
neurons in Bondar's brain would have used up their
residual oxygen, . . . 000 times a year in the United States,
someone's heart stops beating on the . . . his death near his New Jersey home. After
being discovered by his wife, unconscious and . . . heart stops:
about new research into how brain cells die and how
something as simple . . . always been taught
in medical school: that after about five minutes
without a pulse, the brain starts dying, followed by
heart muscle the . . . that can play out over the succeeding hours,
or even days. Dying turns out to (Mon, 16 Jul 2007, 14 KB) |
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# 29472 | NEWSWEEK: To Treat the Dead [Mark Plus] |
the definition of "clinical death" and his brain
has shut down to conserve oxygen. But . . . be revived because the tissues of his brain and heart had
suffered irreversible damage from lack of oxygen. This process was
understood to begin after just four or five minutes. If the . . . emergency medicine at the University of
Pennsylvania. "After one hour," he says, "we couldn't see evidence . . . off from
their blood supply died only hours later.
But if the cells are still . . . someone who has
been dead for an hour? Because once the cells have been without . . . infusion
to keep the heart in a state of suspended animation. Patients were put on (Sun, 29 Apr 2007, 6 KB) |
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# 29217 | Suspending Life: The Science of Cryonics [Mark Plus] |
Science of Cryonics
By Jen Schripsema
Moments after death, some people are being preserved in . . . memories which are physically stored in the brain,
under the assumption that in the future . . . But cryonically preserving a body, or a brain, after death doesn't actually
involve freezing at . . . is referred to as a
glass-like state. After vitrification, cryonics labs suspend people in
liquid . . . have them come back to
their original state. You can vitrify a single human cell . . . the Cryonics Institute disagree. The
Alcor website states: Vitrification can happen on any scale at . . . cold climates and reach
a deep, frozen state of hibernation to survive the winter. The . . . hearts stop and they have no detectable brain activity for
weeks, but when it's . . . they regain all their vital functions
within hours. But these animals have several adaptations to (Fri, 02 Mar 2007, 7 KB) |
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# 29173 | NADH - an underrated supplement [oberon] |
34.
Intranasal administration with NAD+ profoundly decreases brain injury in
a rat model of transient . . . activation plays a
significant role in ischemic brain damage. Increasing evidence has
supported the hypothesis . . . hypothesized that NAD+
administration may decrease ischemic brain injury. In this study, we used
a . . . delivery significantly increased NAD+
contents in the brains. Intranasal delivery with 10 mg/kg NAD+ at 2 hours
after ischemic onset profoundly decreased infarct formation when assessed
either at 24 or 72 hours after ischemia. The NAD+ administration also
significantly attenuated . . . mg/kg nicotinamide did not
decrease ischemic brain damage. These results provide the first in . . . Rating Scale (MDRS) and the Mini Mental
State Examination. After 6 months of treatment, subjects (Thu, 22 Feb 2007, 5 KB) |
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# 28785 | News item - Japan - Missing man lies dormant 24 days [Chris Manning] |
Rokko in western Japan on October 7 after a barbecue with colleagues. Rather than joining . . . on Tuesday. "I must have fallen asleep after that."
When a passing climber found him . . . treated Mr Uchikoshi believe he lost consciousness after his fall and that his body's natural survival instincts kicked in, sending him into a state akin to hibernation as the temperature on . . . as 10 degrees.
"He fell into a state similar to hibernation and many of his organs slowed, but his brain was protected," Dr Shinichi Sato, head of the hospital's emergency unit, told reporters. "I believe his brain capacity has recovered 100 per cent."
Doctors . . . her heart had stopped beating for two hours and her temperature had dropped to 16 (Wed, 27 Dec 2006, 3 KB) |
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# 28655 | The Nanogirl News~ [Gina Miller] |
at Madison's Memorial High School.(Wisconsin State Journal 11.11.06) http://www.madison. . . . microsensor for monitoring the bone healing process after surgery -- it is so tiny it can . . . device can provide a readout within an hour and a half, whereas existing methods for . . . a team of researchers from the United States and the Netherlands, led by a physicist . . . proven to be highly effective in reducing brain inflammation, protecting neuronal cells, restoring cognitive function (Sat, 11 Nov 2006, 13 KB) |
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# 28645 | Suspended Animation (Prehoda) [2Arcturus] |
is practically no electrical activity in your brain and you are in a dreamless sleep. . . . raised to 37 C for a few hours, so that the energy stores within the . . . back
on, keeping you in an anesthetized state. After 9 months in hibernation, you are brought (Tue, 7 Nov 2006, 14 KB) |
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# 28359 | Feat that allows brain to survive for months in a nearly anoxic state. [Basie] |
coetzeebasie@yahoo.com>
Subject: Feat that allows brain to survive for months in a nearly anoxic state.
Date: Sun, 27 Aug 2006 15:09: . . . store
vast amounts of glycogen in its brain to keep the brain functioning and
healthy from February to April, . . . that the amount of glycogen in the brain was at
its peak in February, when . . . Glycogen, an energy supply that the carp brain uses to survive
anoxia, was 15 times . . . survive for months in
a nearly anoxic state.
There is currently no direct tie between . . . examining the brains
of the fish shortly after removing them from the pond.
They found . . . level
that supports brain function for 16 hours in the anoxic winter when energy
demand (Sun, 27 Aug 2006, 6 KB) |
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# 28168 | Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage [Anthony .] |
From: "Anthony ." <autophagy@gmail.com>
Subject: Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage
Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage
By Dan . . . Fedorenko, knew
what to do: freeze her brain.
"She wanted to extend her life by . . . years," Fedorenko said.
Today, Lidia Ivanovna's brain sits in a metal container in a . . . s first cryonics company
outside the United States, in 2005 so that they and their . . . America, dogs have been frozen for eight hours and revived," said
Potapov, 29, a former . . . cells and revive them."
In the United States, 150 bodies are frozen in cryonic slumber, . . . proud history
in the Soviet Union, which after its fall bequeathed the country's
premier (Tue, 4 Jul 2006, 11 KB) |
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# 28155 | [jhughes@changesurfer.com: [>Htech] Russians interested in cryonics] [Eugen Leitl] |
index.php?action_id=2&story_id=18041
Frozen Brains Awaiting Resurrection Day in Storage
By Dan . . . Fedorenko, knew what
to do: freeze her brain.
"She wanted to extend her life by . . . years," Fedorenko
said.
Today, Lidia Ivanovna's brain sits in a metal container in a . . . s first cryonics company
outside the United States, in 2005 so that they and their . . . America, dogs have been frozen for eight hours and revived," said
Potapov, 29, a former . . . cells and revive them."
In the United States, 150 bodies are frozen in cryonic slumber, . . . proud history
in the Soviet Union, which after its fall bequeathed the country's
premier (Fri, 30 Jun 2006, 12 KB) |
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