back to article Suspended-animation cold sleep achieved in lab

Top boffins in the States believe that they may be on the track of a way to place living human beings into suspended animation, allowing them to survive long periods effectively frozen before being "reanimated" with no ill effects. Dr Mark Roth, based at a Seattle cancer laboratory, got interested in suspended animation after …

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  1. Stef 4
    Go

    That's why mum's go to Iceland.

    "Dead" for 23 days? I hadn't heard of that guy.

    I'd like to know if his stomach was empty, or if he had lost any weight in that time. Any decomposition or was it too cold?

    "Then, once the underlying problem had been fixed, they could be reanimated." Yeah, I saw that episode of Star Trek Next Generation. It wasn't a good one.

    I did see a documentary from the year 1987, and N.A.S.A. launches the last of America's deep space probes. In a freak mishap Ranger 3 and its pilot Captain William 'Buck' Rogers are blown out of their trajectory into an orbit which freezes his life support systems, and returns Buck Rogers to Earth five-hundred years later.

    He seemed just fine, although develop a propensity for karate chopping aliens in the back.

    1. Anomalous Cowherd Silver badge

      Quite the opposite of empty

      Apparantly he was walking down the hill after a barbeque when he slipped and broke his pelvis. Ther article I read was quiet as to the state of his digestive system - probably a good thing too.

  2. Graham Dawson Silver badge
    Boffin

    Huh...

    I must be permanently on the verge of dying, then. My core body temperature has always been 35.5 or thereabouts. And I've always needed a nice warm rock to lie on before I can really get going in a morning...

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Boffin

      core body temperature != your "temperature"...

      it's the temperature of your insides (core : geddit ?)

      if you want to know that, you have to stick the thermometer up your arse (or got to France - that's their preferred way)

    2. BristolBachelor Gold badge
      Coat

      Internal temperature

      Raising your outside temperature on a rock just wont do. You need to raise your internal temperature.

      That is what black coffee was invented for :)

  3. Steen Hive
    Joke

    Very pleasant

    So not only will one have the discomfort of freezing to death, but they'll also choke you.

  4. Thomas 18
    Happy

    cool

    This is totally awesome! lets test it on mice first though.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Troll

      no - hippies

      or midgets! (bald ones)

  5. Bitsucker
    FAIL

    Suspended animation?

    In every one of the suspended animation examples listed in the article the subject had a reduced (core?) body temperature. But all of them appeared to be substantially hotter than their surroundings when found. So how can the article say that they had "literally frozen to death"?

    Also, it could be questioned whether the subjects really did suffer no ill effects. I believe that surgeons in the old Soviet Union used to perform heart surgery having stopped the patient's heart. Rather than using the high-techery then available in the west, the surgeons cooled the patients down to 5%C by placing ice over their bodies. Western physicians who studied the outcomes of the 'successful' procedures (those where the patient survived) as well as the blood passed through the patients once during surgery & retained, concluded that the brain suffered damage when blood flow was restricted, even at very low temperatures. And all of the examples listed in your article were warmer than 5%C when found.

    1. Sir Runcible Spoon

      Sir

      I too, am curious about how the body maintained any kind of above ambient temperature - especially on a mountain-side.

      And being alive is not the same as alive and well - Wasn't there any sign of brain damage from such a prolonged lack of oxygen?

  6. The Indomitable Gall

    Must have been relatively common in days gone by....

    I'm guessing this wasn't unheard of in Ireland in days of old...

    The tradition of the "wake" was to get lots of people in the room with the supposed corpse overnight and check whether he'd wake up. I mean, do you really want to warm up a room with a dead body in it? No. Unless you thought they might have just gone into "cold sleep".

    I'm curious as to whether blood starts to settle out into component parts during cold sleep (do nemotodes have blood like ours?) -- the evidence the Romans took for Jesus being dead was that his blood had separated. Would make for an interesting bit of historical forensics.

    1. Christoph

      Extra step needed

      There was an extra step in the Irish revivification process - splashing whiskey over the body.

      1. Ken 16 Silver badge
        Go

        no

        just pouring it near the body - if they were alive they'd ask for a glass too

    2. John 62

      wakes

      Probably a dual-purpose tradition. Apparently lead poisoning used to be a problem, but this is Ireland we're talking about! If you're going to put a body in a room in a house so people can pay their respects and support the bereaved, you need to heat the room so the living don't die too!

  7. Norm DePlume
    Thumb Down

    "literally frozen to death"

    Are you trying to get into Colemanballs?

    1. Marvin the Martian
      Headmaster

      "literally"

      "literally frozen" at 22*C. Beats me too.

  8. JDX Gold badge
    Terminator

    Stuff

    16 degrees is hotter than the surroundings... but if you leave a huge piece of hot meat outside it will take a long time to reach ambient temperature.

  9. Crazy Operations Guy
    Joke

    Yay! Anecdotal Evidence

    Because everyone knows that anecdotal evidence is always true and should be used in scientific research.

    1. The Indomitable Gall
      FAIL

      *sigh*

      Scientific enquiry doesn't start with empirical data -- it starts with anecdote and observation, and someone asks "I wonder how that works?" and starts to investigate.

      This story is about that very thing.

      Man hears stories of unexplained phenomenon.

      Man decides to investigate.

      Man replicates something appearing to be the same as aforementioned phenomenon.

      -->potential explanation.

      Man performs further experiments on said potential explanation to see if it holds water.

      Science starts with unknowns.

      The discipline that starts with a bunch of knowns is called engineering, and it doesn't discover anything new.

      Joke icon or not, that was a daft post.

      1. GeorgeTuk

        Now that is a response to a silly post

        Top hole sir, top hole!

      2. Charles 9

        Engineering starts with knowns...

        ...but then tries to use the knowns to determine the unknowns. Engineering DOES find new things--their true goal is to find out "how low can you go"--with what can you and can't you get away in a design or project. IOW, sciences may find the new stuff, but it's the engineers that try to find the minimum x of the stuff that works.

  10. stupormundi

    Suspicious reanimations

    "They have no heartbeat and are clinically dead. But they can be reanimated..."

    Yeah right. Obviously, they have been called to heaven to fight Satan's army, and that reanimation business is just a trick of the bad guys to remove an irreplaceable general. Don't you guys watch south park?

  11. Colonel Panic
    Boffin

    Literally frozen ?

    "her body temperature plunged to just 16°C* before she was rescued, warmed - and came miraculously back to life, despite having literally frozen to death"

    Hate to be a pedant (ok, I'm lying, I love it actually) but 16° C is not "frozen". Frozen is 0.

    So she wasn't. Not literally or for that matter at all.

    1. Pedro Mendosa
      FAIL

      Think About It

      Freezing isn't a fixed value; it's relative to the subject.

      The freezing point of water is around 0 degrees Celcius at 1 atmosphere of pressure. That is not the case for all liquids.

      1. Ken Hagan Gold badge

        Re: Think about it

        Yes, it's relative. But a trip to your local supermarket will confirm that for red meat it isn't 16 degrees or anywhere close. Humans are mostly water, after all.

  12. Terry H

    Not much progress

    Sometimes I wonder about our society of "information overload". Scientists do read right?

    I read about this prinicple at least 3 years ago, maybe 5. It was an article about a guy who had determined that tissue did not decompose if an organism was deprived of ALL oxygen. Which pretty much makes sense if you think of food packed in nitrogen. The general idea was to stop every last bit of all biological processes.

    Anyhow, as I recall he had saturated some life form, frogs I believe, with carbon monoxide and reanimated them latter with no apparent ill-effects.

    Cooling was not part of the story as he pointed out that cold just complicated matters because if you freeze anything with water in it, like biological cells, the water expands (crystallizes) and shatters the cell wall thereby making the life form nonviable.

    This story seems to document someone reinventing the wheel. Maybe there are important advances that didn't make it through the dumb-down filters for publication. But at face value this is far from groundbreaking and a fairly disappointing that apparently no progress at all has been made in years and years.

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    water and freezing

    Unless water is frozen extremely quickly, it will crystalize and EXPAND. This tends to cause damage at the cellular level. I'm very much doubting the child was frozen, especially at 16C.

    1. Chemist

      Re : water and freezing →

      In any case even 'normal temp.' people will suffer frostbite on exposed tissue often in a very short time.

  14. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Coat

    IIRC

    The maximum density for water is 4c. It would seem the outline for a viable process would be a temperature ramp down with gradual shift to an inert gas (while keeping a little CO2 in the incoming stream to stimulate respiration).

    Could you chill them fast enough to avoid serious conditions getting worse during the chill? Who knows.

    Skull cooling has certainly been looked at as a way to reduce brain swelling during head injuries and strokes.

    Mine would have PMP with Niven & Pournelle's "Wait it out" loaded.

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Coffee/keyboard

    No way

    There's no way I'd want to be put to sleep only to wake up in the 23rd century where humans are no longer conceived naturally and buttfucking is the social norm.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      or worse...

      Mouths are now butts...

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Happy

      @no way

      oh i dunno, that sounds quite fun...

    3. Ken 16 Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Captain Jack Harness

      is waiting for you!

      (careful with that thumb)

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Up

    It's all bullshit.

    I know I have poked every member of my family into the deep freezer - one after another and they all came out very cold, very stiff and very dead.

    The cuts of meat however were fine.

  17. skeptical i
    Flame

    Braaaaaaaaains!

    Oop, that only happens when they come back from dead, not cold ... right?

    <-- Beat 'em or burn 'em, they go up pretty easy.

  18. Daniel Wilkie

    Well

    They best make sure they don' do this to criminals, I've seen Demolition Man...

  19. Jacob Lipman
    Thumb Up

    Cryogenics and reanimation

    Fascinating idea, hope it comes to fruition in the next few decades... I think I remember an article the Reg published a while back about a reanimated dog; the dog was killed, blood removed and replaced with saline, then a day later given its blood back and revived, with "only" something like 30% brain damage. Maybe these processes, and several others that have not been invented yet, need to be combined for successful cryogenic storage of human beings?

  20. Winkypop Silver badge
    Coat

    Fishy appendages

    I've been reanimating* fish-fingers for years!

    * well re-heating is close enough.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Think big

    Why is there always such a lack of amibtion? Yeasts and nematode worms? Why not get the ball rolling properly by allowing our parliamentarians and bankers to make a more concrete contribution to science, entertainment and serious Channel 4 documentaries. I'm be delighted to sign up both my MP and my bank manager.

  22. Nick Pettefar

    Suspended Animation

    I think the probable end point of the exercise is suspended animation, not a human lollipop. Hence the temperature which they end up using will be whatever works best and most probably not 0'C.

    Also, "No way" AC at 22:14, I think you need some help...

  23. Simon Robinson
    Flame

    Low body temperature...

    I once scared the bejesus out of a St John's Ambulance man after he read my body temperature (in ear) as 31.5C - apparently I should have been dead, or at least unconscious, rather than just complaining I didn't feel well and barely being able to walk.

    Annoyingly I'd recovered by the Monday (this was at a rugby game on a Saturday afternoon) and could go back to work.

  24. mulder
    Alert

    flatliners

    was there not a movie made about this subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatliners ?

  25. Anonymous Coward
    Joke

    frozen suspended animation

    Anyone who wonders how this can happen should have attended some lectures I went to. Every time a certain prof entered the stage I myself switched immediately to suspended animation (though cannot say whether it qualified as frozen). Usually, I was even able to reanimate all myself afterwards.

  26. Bounty

    "He was found 23 days later with a core body temperature of just 22°C*. "

    I'm sorry, but 70 Fahrenheit or 22 Celsius is very very very very far from "frozen." That's about the same (core) temperature as most of the bodies burried in the ground, and I don't see anybody reviving them any time soon.

    At least the other story attempts to seem plausible. That Japanese story is more like a fabrication, broken insturments and a few shots of whiskey for my friends the paramedics.

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