
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When cryoprotectants are perfused through the blood vessels in the brain, they cannot cross the blood-brain barrier as fast as water can move in the opposite direction. And cryoprotectants generally have a much higher osmotic concentration than the typical blood plasma. For example, the cryoprotectant solution M22 has an osmotic concentration around 100 times higher.
As a result, in a successful cryoprotectant perfusion (without fixatives), water rushes out of the tissue into the blood vessels, the tissue dehydrates, and you end up with a shrunken brain that is visibly pulled away from the skull. The brain weight goes down by 50% or more. This is currently considered a good sign of cryoprotectant perfusion quality.
case report A-1002 is an example of a shrunken brainFar be it from me to say that a brain preservation method will not work because it seems weird. I myself have proposed that aldehyde fixation — something which is definitively lethal by contemporary medical criteria — may allow people to be revived with meaningful memories intact if humanity develops sufficiently advanced technology in the future. So I’m not going to use the absurdity heuristic here.
Instead, the key question is what this severe dehydration does [...]
---
First published:
Source:
---
Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.
---
Images from the article:
Apple Podcasts and Spotify do not show images in the episode description. Try Pocket Casts, or another podcast app.
By LessWrongWhen cryoprotectants are perfused through the blood vessels in the brain, they cannot cross the blood-brain barrier as fast as water can move in the opposite direction. And cryoprotectants generally have a much higher osmotic concentration than the typical blood plasma. For example, the cryoprotectant solution M22 has an osmotic concentration around 100 times higher.
As a result, in a successful cryoprotectant perfusion (without fixatives), water rushes out of the tissue into the blood vessels, the tissue dehydrates, and you end up with a shrunken brain that is visibly pulled away from the skull. The brain weight goes down by 50% or more. This is currently considered a good sign of cryoprotectant perfusion quality.
case report A-1002 is an example of a shrunken brainFar be it from me to say that a brain preservation method will not work because it seems weird. I myself have proposed that aldehyde fixation — something which is definitively lethal by contemporary medical criteria — may allow people to be revived with meaningful memories intact if humanity develops sufficiently advanced technology in the future. So I’m not going to use the absurdity heuristic here.
Instead, the key question is what this severe dehydration does [...]
---
First published:
Source:
---
Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.
---
Images from the article:
Apple Podcasts and Spotify do not show images in the episode description. Try Pocket Casts, or another podcast app.

113,179 Listeners

132 Listeners

7,264 Listeners

531 Listeners

16,339 Listeners

4 Listeners

14 Listeners

2 Listeners