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Msg | Description |
# 33441 | Allbout Evil Part 1 [M2darwin] |
criticism/support and becoming an activist.
Nation-states spend billions of dollars trying to carefully . . . learning curve because it does
plateau and after a certain amount of experience, animal or . . . cryonics, because, for instance, perfusing cryoprotectants, reperfusing brains
and bodies after prolonged ischemic intervals, and carrying out prolonged
. . . count - they died of pulmonary
edema, one after the other: something he often blamed on . . . two ORs several
times in a 12 hour day!
I was also being taken to (Wed, 9 Mar 2011, 17 KB) |
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# 33149 | Scoring Cases [M2darwin] |
stored at near 0 C for 24 hours, there's still
a reasonable chance that their brain contains the information that cryonics
tries to . . . t ideal : ideal cryonics preservation
freezes the brain before an hour of cold ischemia has occurred (before that
. . . current science would be to put the brain in state at low temperature that we
know is . . . at all from that start. Since the brain is composed of complex
molecular structures, even . . . which you make the statement:
"Since the brain is composed of complex molecular structures, even . . . to exist in other humans,
presumably long after you are dead? In fact, they may (Tue, 28 Dec 2010, 10 KB) |
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# 32630 | Hello everyone [Gerald Monroe] |
life.
I've become interested in cryonics after taking a human anatomy course.
The first . . . had labored on this man for many hours but ultimately
there he was on the . . . as sufficient damage was done to their brain tissue.
So I started thinking about the technical elements of it. If you froze
someone's brain, how would you rebuild it into a working state? You'd have
to have some kind (Tue, 15 Jun 2010, 11 KB) |
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# 32523 | Henson's experiment [Ettinger] |
original. Instead of a succession of computer states
we could have pages in a book . . . time--perhaps a standing wave in the brain--so
that you (present) overlap (in space . . . muddle the concept of uploading, consider your brain
being infiltrated by nano devices on the same scale as the number of
cells in the brain. The devices are small enough so there . . . in specific outputs. They build a
parallel brain and operate it long enough to be confident the brain in
the nano devices duplicates the running . . . over forming long and
short term memory. After hours to days, we warm up the natural (Wed, 31 Mar 2010, 5 KB) |
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# 32183 | cryoprotectant toxicity neutralization by quercetin I [oberon] |
possibly reduces ice crystal growth. However good
brain permeation would likely require liposome encapsulation. It . . . HLECs in culture were incubated for 48 hours with either 1% (vol/vol) dimethyl sulfoxide ( . . . in a dose-dependent manner.
PMID: 17652743
Brain Res. 1998 Jun 1;794(2):304- . . . protective effect on the pro-oxidant-antioxidant state following chronic ethanol treatment in mice. Pretreatment ( . . . ethanol group were observed in the group after post-treatment (ethanol 18% for 30 d+ (Sun, 29 Nov 2009, 15 KB) |
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# 31899 | Common Food Dye May Hold Promise In Treating Spinal Cord Inju... [oberon] |
for. 8)
Since BBG crosses the blood brain barrier, a strong argument could be
made . . . damage to the spinal cord in the hours following a spinal cord injury, an injury . . . area surrounding a spinal cord injury shortly after it occurs, and paradoxically kills off what . . . to an emergency room within a few hours, so a compound that could stem the . . . to be helpful to our bodies aC" after all, it's the main source of . . . darker side in the spinal cord. Immediately after a spinal cord injury occurs, ATP surges . . . that can be given to patients shortly after injury, for the purpose of decreasing the . . . research was supported by the New York State Spinal Cord Injury program, the Miriam and (Sun, 23 Aug 2009, 12 KB) |
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# 31377 | Should NADH be added to washout fluids? [oberon] |
supplement, but judging by its effects on brain
function and aging, it should be.]
Front . . . 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 . . . Rating Scale (MDRS) and the Mini Mental State Examination. After 6 months of treatment, subjects (Thu, 5 Feb 2009, 7 KB) |
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# 31140 | "Ice slurry" adaptable for cryonics purposes? [Julian Conrad] |
oxygen from blood pumped
through the body, brain cells start to die in just
minutes. Within 10 to 20 minutes after the heart stops
beating, the clock has . . . can
get the heart ticking again, the brain has died.
Recently, however, researchers have begun to develop a
new technique that can reduce the brain and other
organs' demand for oxygen, giving . . . in
emergencies while also protecting the heart, brain,
kidneys and spinal cord in planned surgeries.
. . . through the carotid arteries
and into the brain, cooling it rapidly.
For several decades, doctors . . . external
cooling can take more than two hours to have the same
effect. In addition, . . . from
hundreds of companies, universities, and federal,
state and municipal agencies to help them solve (Thu, 6 Nov 2008, 8 KB) |
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# 31104 | The Cryonics Institute Makes Another Technical Disclosure I [oberon] |
the Immortalist
Society) is disclosing the Blood-Brain Barrier modifier which
Dr. Pichugin had spent . . . html
-- Ben Best
<
[Ben: Modifying the blood brain barrier would be essential to enable good . . . with PVS2 and resulted in no regrowth after cooling and rewarming (cryopreservation). Dilution of the . . . by PVS2 treatment, but regrowth was poor after cryopreservation. It is thought that dilution of . . . significantly (p<0.05) higher regrowth rates after cryopreservation. It is thought that addition of . . . by deep supercooling to maintain a liquid state of intracellular water near -40 degrees C. . . . column chromatography. Although all the fractions obtained after each purification step exhibited some levels of . . . solution at 4 degrees C for 20 hours. Preservation solutions were supplemented with various flavonoids. (Wed, 8 Oct 2008, 8 KB) |
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# 30869 | Destruction of the neuronal person [Jens Rabis] |
constant at -145 Grad Celsius, an animal
brain molecular / atomic can analyze!?
Until it so . . . on the Cryo-German technology to say.
After England, Russia, USA and Australia!
-145 Grad . . . are considered to be in the same state as an anesthetized person
undergoing a medical . . . it is Lotto - but memories in the
brain:
The remembrance works with neurons + synapses. What happens to the fine
synapses, if you have a brain freeze?
Note: Germany cool with liquid nitrogen . . . However,
people have been clinically dead for hours
and been revived without apparent harm, and
(Wed, 16 Jul 2008, 17 KB) |
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