Can You Cryogenically Freeze Your Body and Come Back to Life?

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  • čas přidán 26. 11. 2019
  • When you die, there are a lot of things you can do with your dead body--embalm it, cremate it, donate it to science (the list goes on…), but some people will choose to have their dead bodies, or body parts, frozen until the technology of the future has (hopefully) advanced enough to bring them back to life. This week on Reactions, we break down the chemistry of cryogenic freezing and if it’s realistic to think we could ever reanimate a frozen corpse.
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    Credits:
    Producer: Elaine Seward
    Writer: Samantha Jones, Ph.D.
    Scientific Consultants: Leila Duman, Ph.D. Michelle Boucher, Ph.D., Joe Schwarcz, Ph.D., Michael Swain, Ph.D., David H. Gorski, M.D./Ph.D., João Pedro de Magalhaes, Ph.D., David Sherwood, Ph.D.
    Executive Producer: George Zaidan
    Executive Producer: Hilary Hudson
    Music:
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    Sonton Vanguard - Components A
    AXS - Dark Alley
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    Sources:
    General cryopreservation principles
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    Corpse cryopreservation and forensics
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3...
    The church of cryopreservation
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    The false science of cryonics
    www.technologyreview.com/s/54...
    The case for cryonics
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
    Euthanasia and cryothanasia
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
    Cryopreservation and its clinical applications www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    Cryopreservation: An emerging paradigm change
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    Fish antifreeze protein and the freezing and recrystallization of ice.
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6...
    Antifreeze and ice nucleator proteins in terrestrial arthropods.
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    Cryoprotectant Toxicity: Facts, Issues, and Questions
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    Scientific justification for cryonics
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1...
    Cryopreserving mammalian cells
    assets.thermofisher.com/TFS-A...
    Persistence of Long-Term Memory in Vitrified and Revived Caenorhabditis elegans
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    An Interneuronal Chemoreceptor Required for Olfactory Imprinting in C. elegans
    science.sciencemag.org/conten...
    Maintenance of C. elegans
    www.wormbook.org/chapters/www_...
    Expression of Ice-Binding Proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans Improves the Survival Rate upon Cold Shock and during Freezing
    www.nature.com/articles/s4159...
    Ever wonder why dogs sniff each others' butts? Or how Adderall works? Or whether it's OK to pee in the pool? We've got you covered: Reactions a web series about the chemistry that surrounds you every day.
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    Freezing frogs
    www.livescience.com/32175-can...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 556

  • @ACSReactions
    @ACSReactions  Před 4 lety +133

    Did you know that some species of frog can survive freezing? When the wood frog, found in North America, begins to freeze it releases sugar--from its liver--into its bloodstream. That sugar travels to its tissues where it helps keep cells from dehydrating and shrinking. Cool, right? Sadly, we humans don’t have this adaptation and with cryonics we’d be frozen AFTER we’re already dead (these incredible frogs are still alive!). So, no dice.

    • @parkerflorence5332
      @parkerflorence5332 Před 3 lety +8

      Why does the person have to be dead though? As we get better at sequencing and modifying genes we should be able to adapt similar traits to the frogs. Then medically induce a coma and start to slowly freeze a live person

    • @MrLFDV
      @MrLFDV Před 3 lety +2

      @@parkerflorence5332 My thoughts exactly. Maybe it is forbidden or laws against it? It technically would mean "killing" a person.

    • @rickytorres9089
      @rickytorres9089 Před 3 lety

      What about the freezing of animals CHOOSER to us though? I thought there were some done with rabbits or something that survived for 43 days or something along those lines?

    • @lcylcy8848
      @lcylcy8848 Před 3 lety

      how about putting another preparation for injecting something
      along with defreezing process ? assisted adaptation/augmented adaptation or something ?
      how about a dog, or cats instead of euthanase it ask for it as donor,
      or cat or fish..., elephant, dinosaurus....
      hmm maybe its already working already, but the school just want to keep ppl paying for this research...
      ill name it chambers of solitude, and we'll get out like prometheus...

    • @jfrtbikgkdhjbeep9974
      @jfrtbikgkdhjbeep9974 Před 2 lety

      do you want to be frozen in time?, if you did not die before you were frozen, research the options. I live here 😙

  • @PeXis
    @PeXis Před 4 lety +616

    If this actually worked. Imagine basically going to sleep and instantly (from your perspective) wake up hundreds of years into the future.

    • @brycew7731
      @brycew7731 Před 4 lety +88

      Eh. I know people act like it’s instant when they pass out for a few moments or something. But even tho your not conscious I was passed out for 24 hours and dead for 5 minutes after a OD. I wasn’t conscious to experience time, but it didn’t feel instant at all. It just felt like how you feel after you went to sleep and woke up. Not instant. From my personal experience

    • @brycew7731
      @brycew7731 Před 4 lety +29

      It was verrrrrrry peaceful tho death doesn’t seem that bad

    • @PeXis
      @PeXis Před 4 lety +61

      @@brycew7731 Sure but your brain isn't off when you're unconscious. If everything in your brain is perfectly preserved, it should feel just an instant.

    • @webgummy3772
      @webgummy3772 Před 4 lety +14

      honestly your mind would go into a state of shock..

    • @brycew7731
      @brycew7731 Před 4 lety +6

      PeXis that’s a good point. I agree

  • @bigghoss762
    @bigghoss762 Před 4 lety +351

    So I can't get frozen for 1,000 years and get thawed out and have a robot best friend and get married to a mutant cyclops?

    • @firestrikegaming7345
      @firestrikegaming7345 Před 3 lety +22

      bigghoss762 Futurama in a nutshell

    • @johnniemurphy2150
      @johnniemurphy2150 Před 3 lety +10

      @bigghoss762 I mean yeah, but you’ll be a delivery boy

    • @tayoabass294
      @tayoabass294 Před 3 lety +2

      @Walter White We should use it as a way to travel space

    • @johnniemurphy2150
      @johnniemurphy2150 Před 3 lety +2

      @Walter White Actually more than likely you’d be treated like a virus...Imagine all the sickness/disease we could cure over those 1000 years (3021). All those cures and such would make our immune system weaker over time. So if you time traveled 1000 years forward, let’s say with a cold...You could potentially destroy their society

    • @afrosamurai9087
      @afrosamurai9087 Před 3 lety +2

      @@johnniemurphy2150 what?

  • @Laff700
    @Laff700 Před 4 lety +200

    I think preserving the connections between neurons is more important than keeping the cells alive. It's possible that the cells could be repaired after dying in the future.

    • @JH-ed4mm
      @JH-ed4mm Před 3 lety +29

      I think you are very right. I'm very sure the people who have been frozen now aren't going to be alive ever again. Our technology isn't up there *yet*. The neurons need to be sustained pretty much perfectly which isn't the case at all right now. Besides that, if you want to have an actual chance (in the future), you should be frozen alive. However, this isn't legalized yet. At the moment cryogenic freezing is basically a waste of money.

    • @jimhoffman4766
      @jimhoffman4766 Před 3 lety +5

      @@JH-ed4mm yeah but still in about 50yrs we should be able to freeze (and unfreeze) brains and bodys.

    • @JH-ed4mm
      @JH-ed4mm Před 3 lety +4

      @@jimhoffman4766 Keep in mind that aging is still a thing. If we could somehow manipulate gen p53 it would be useful.

    • @sagardyenchilwar8762
      @sagardyenchilwar8762 Před 2 lety +3

      @@JH-ed4mm
      Don't make sense to me
      You are just building a clone not reviving about you if cells are damage
      But this leads to question what you consider you and what not

    • @aaaduccs6667
      @aaaduccs6667 Před 2 lety +1

      Yesss I agree

  • @tibbsshaleen
    @tibbsshaleen Před 3 lety +74

    There’s a Netflix documentary about this. An Asian family did this with their little girl who had the world’s deadliest brain tumor. 😔

  • @easemailboxes
    @easemailboxes Před 2 lety +52

    I am up for it. The less people who are interested at this point the better it is for me and other time travelers.

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem +4

      I feel exactly the same way. Exactly. Time travelers. So awesome!

    • @DucknCoverin
      @DucknCoverin Před rokem

      “Time travelers”…..😂
      You’ll be a nicely preserved corpse in a dewar while the other cryo cultists gather around your remains to talk nonsense and do weird things. The only traveling you’ll be doing is when the company inevitably goes belly up in the future and they just bury you in that can, or they send you to some other cryonics facility maintained by philanthropic cultists. On a long enough timeline though, you will thaw and go back to the earth for whatever reasons. Even with the way Alcor and Cryonics Institute set aside funds to sustain you. No company lasts forever. There’s always mismanagement, scandal, economic collapse. Even if you manage to stay frozen, the process that got you there is one that required your organs and circulatory system to be poisoned. Your brain is dead. The information and spark of human life is all gone. Frozen meat pumped full of toxic substances is all you’ll be.

    • @kidsIIIII009
      @kidsIIIII009 Před 10 měsíci

      Count me in

  • @shush4569
    @shush4569 Před 4 lety +154

    I would be frozen alive just makes more sense than dying and then being frozen

    • @joshdove4562
      @joshdove4562 Před 4 lety +13

      That's what I thought I would figure that l would live near the facility and then when I'm ready I would go to the facility and let it happen

    • @steve.k4735
      @steve.k4735 Před 4 lety +29

      I am signed up for Cryonics so I have read this stuff .. You CAN NOT legally get frozen before CERTIFIED death, to do so would be as the law is currently murder.

    • @Kerttis
      @Kerttis Před 3 lety +2

      @@steve.k4735 exactly its not legally possible for them to do so

    • @blackandproud83
      @blackandproud83 Před 3 lety +1

      Steve.K47 Really? What was the process of signing up for it?

    • @dupeaccount1647
      @dupeaccount1647 Před 3 lety

      @@blackandproud83 I'm also signed up.

  • @salvatorecolosimo2008
    @salvatorecolosimo2008 Před 3 lety +292

    If anyone is watching this from the future please revive me lol

  • @Antitheist
    @Antitheist Před 4 lety +48

    The whole point of cryonics is a bet on technologies of the FUTURE, not the capabilities of the past or present, which is why most of this video isn't relevant. As long as the neurons can be successfully preserved, that's all that's important for now. If advanced molecular nanotechnology comes to pass within the next couple of decades (as predicted), we should have a pathway for either repairing all the damage and reviving the "corpsicle," or copying the brain pattern to reconstruct it in a computer architecture (which could "live" in a virtual world or be downloaded to an advanced robotic form that is perhaps indistinguishable from humans). So what are the odds of this occurring and people being revived? 50%? 10%? 1%? Well, if you DON'T get cryogenically frozen, the odds of being revived are exactly 0%. So if you have the money, what do you have to lose? You can't take it with you....

    • @janek8195
      @janek8195 Před 4 lety +11

      Thank you! This video was such bullshit! Only thing I think u got wrong is that a copy of someone's brain isn't them. Copying ur mind doesn't save ur life since there's no continuity of consciousness.

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      @@janek8195
      That is a debate that lots of philosophers have had arguments about in both directions.
      I personally tend to the other side.
      For a start, in deep sleep and especially anaesthesia, the neurons aren't doing much, so continuity is already lost.

    • @janek8195
      @janek8195 Před 3 měsíci

      @@donaldhobson8873 So you think you die every time you go to sleep?

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      @@janek8195 No. I think continuity of consciousness is a silly way to define personal identity.
      So long as I have the same memories, personality etc I'm still me. Discontinuities from being asleep don't matter.

  • @dali9181
    @dali9181 Před 4 lety +85

    Am I the only one who reads these comments and thinks about someone reading them and laughing at them 200 years later?
    btw if you are from the future feel free to revive me somehow, we can have a fun conversation :D

    • @marzenakawalec1797
      @marzenakawalec1797 Před 3 lety +8

      Not the future person you hoped for but the future person you get, Its 2021 and we cant revive you at the moment.

    • @jarvissanderson3625
      @jarvissanderson3625 Před 3 lety +1

      New update it’s pretty shitty rn I think everyone is sick of living being frozen for sometime wouldn’t be bad

    • @Qwerka
      @Qwerka Před 2 lety

      It's been a year lol

    • @joshualeahy2162
      @joshualeahy2162 Před 2 lety

      I wonder if CZcams will still even be a thing by that time or if it'll evolve or maybe just disappear entirely lol.

  • @gus473
    @gus473 Před 4 lety +101

    Interesting story, but I wish I hadn't watched it over breakfast, with our Thanksgiving turkey thawing in the refrigerator....! 🙊

  • @liamb.6251
    @liamb.6251 Před 3 lety +30

    Imagine being the one guy that drops the dead body after its frozen so it just shatters, that would be a fun trip to the boss's office

  • @RavenWolf654
    @RavenWolf654 Před 4 lety +25

    How I see it. It doesn't matter how damaged the body is now when you freeze it. It only matters how advanced technology we have to resurrect these people. I think that most even damaged people can be resurrected in perfect condition given time. It might take 1000 years to get that point, but it doesn't matter. For me if I got money and I was close to death I would choose to freeze myself. It is risks but better than to be dead for sure.

    • @supermushroom3175
      @supermushroom3175 Před 3 lety +3

      Then you wake up to evil robots who hook you up to a virtual reality world of hell where they torture you for an eternity or until the universe dies

    • @carriesanders3931
      @carriesanders3931 Před 3 lety +1

      Tell me more of what you believed on freezing peoples and bringing them back to life , if you don"t mind tell me.

    • @AndreUrzua1
      @AndreUrzua1 Před 2 lety +3

      Try to revive a pile of bones in the future, damage is irreparable because information is lost and there is no way to recover it

    • @LogicAndReason2025
      @LogicAndReason2025 Před rokem

      Chance of reanimation with cryonics - tiny
      Chance of reanimation without cryonics - zero

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      @@LogicAndReason2025
      Chance of reanimation with cryonics - fairly small
      Chance of reanimation without cryonics - a bit smaller. (I don't want to say with confidence that future tech can't pull this off somehow. The future may have some Very advanced tech.)

  • @abhilashpaul9237
    @abhilashpaul9237 Před 4 lety +6

    Very good info. This Channel deserves a lot of views and likes. 👌👍

  • @yeoss
    @yeoss Před 4 lety +94

    Why not just freeze a pig or something?
    Say... 6 months? A year?
    Then take it out.
    Also have 2 tests, one with Cryoprotectants, one without.

    • @abusnail367
      @abusnail367 Před 3 lety +12

      Because no one is funding these experiments...

    • @jeruzachan9461
      @jeruzachan9461 Před 3 lety +6

      They probably already did, but failed? Haha we don’t know

    • @goebor2422
      @goebor2422 Před 3 lety +8

      Well we can’t just revive the pig with our technology right now the first man who was frozen hasn’t been revived

    • @hhhrari
      @hhhrari Před 3 lety +1

      Yea but pig and our human skin really isn’t the same, I’m no expert.

    • @hooman6210
      @hooman6210 Před 3 lety +5

      Because, think about how vastly our bodily functions differ from any other organism vic versa. Sure there are similarities we can find here and there, but when discussing Cryogenics is an extremely sensitive process that would require the utmost detailed solutions within and throughout. From what happens when we die on a cellular level, to what happens during the time our cells remain frozen. Our bodies are an incredibly complex powerhouse of chemicals and functions flowing in all kinds of specified directions. Also include other variable like , avg rate humans decompose at, normally and while frozen, the time frozen, specific cause of death, the fact the subject has died already so we’d also have to pretty much bring a mummy to life based on the knowledge of how they died, technically a cure to that illness plus some resuscitation. And an infinite number of other variables.
      I feel freezing and unfreezing will do nothing but just preserve a dead body. Maybe a scam, and maybe one day they’ll have to throw all their customers out. Literally

  • @tubewithtrev8665
    @tubewithtrev8665 Před 4 lety +77

    If we had the technology to properly store someone indefinitely, we'd have the technology to keep them from dying in the first place

    • @TianaRenee51293
      @TianaRenee51293 Před 3 lety +2

      Right make it make sense

    • @katscratchfever3506
      @katscratchfever3506 Před 7 měsíci

      Exactly

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      Look, at liquid nitrogen temperatures, the atoms aren't doing anything. They are pretty messed up, but they aren't getting any more messed up.
      It isn't truely indefinite, some things are happening very slowly. But those things take 100's of years.

  • @andomneraio457
    @andomneraio457 Před 3 lety +4

    4:29 This is where she essentially says no, no you can not.

  • @garlicbrush
    @garlicbrush Před rokem +3

    I read a book once, about an old man who did this to himself and was very rich obviously, and when he woke up his body was on display in a museum with all his memories being shown up on tvs, there were wires coursing through his veins, and he was stuck inside the glass chamber, while people looked at him, unable to move. I felt bad for him if he had social anxiety that must have been a nightmare.

  • @wnordelus
    @wnordelus Před 3 lety +17

    Imagine how much therapy you'll need to wrap your head around living, dying, & returning...

  • @keithinadhd6693
    @keithinadhd6693 Před 4 lety +20

    I would pay $400,000 to be reanimated in 200 years. That seems a pretty solid investment.
    Because cryonics has more uses than giving hope to the dying, it has implications for space travel, and preservation, its slowly building into an industry all it’s own. It wont be long before before SpaceX or Google buys up some of these smaller companies. We are at the very start of a snowball effect and in the next 30 years we will see cryogenics boom as an industry. I see real hope in the future.
    Even if it dosnt work, its not like you’ll miss the money.

    • @jonas90.
      @jonas90. Před 4 lety +4

      exactly. if you don't have any heritage or have enough money to invest in cryonics, i think it won't an extra 400k that your family would be missing. personally, this is the best close scenario right now and i think it's worth taking a shot if you have that desire of coming back...

    • @keithinadhd6693
      @keithinadhd6693 Před 4 lety +3

      jonas90 AND! Life insurance can pay for a huge portion of the costs as well. Some of the cryonics companies out there work with your insurance and don’t need much, or, any out of pocket money.

    • @Etaoinshrdlu69
      @Etaoinshrdlu69 Před 11 měsíci

      It gives people hope for their greatest fear. It's going to be a money maker.

  • @gerlsey
    @gerlsey Před 3 lety +6

    Imagine fooling someone they time traveled with this

  • @XCCCUnknown
    @XCCCUnknown Před 3 lety +59

    You know, people are wondering about the success of this thing. What I'm wondering is how long will they live after being "reborn".

    • @josefrybar5991
      @josefrybar5991 Před 2 lety +5

      1000 maybe

    • @ikhlashasib8256
      @ikhlashasib8256 Před 2 lety +8

      @@josefrybar5991 damn ya'll really living in a fairytale dream lol

    • @The_Laughing_Magician
      @The_Laughing_Magician Před 2 lety +5

      @@ikhlashasib8256 I thinking along the lines of 1 million years

    • @luc8254
      @luc8254 Před 2 lety +8

      Well.. I think they wouldn't unfeeze a person unless they had a good life expectancy anyways..

    • @goomba8170
      @goomba8170 Před rokem

      @@luc8254 They wouldn’t be able to know until they do it.

  • @josevelazquez5721
    @josevelazquez5721 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember hearing about this years ago. I was like man for you, it would be like you went to sleep and wake up in the future. Nice

  • @kairam5142
    @kairam5142 Před rokem +3

    Would your skin be all wrinkly and weird after being frozen for so long?
    Will you get freezer burn?
    Is it more easier to lose a limb while frozen?

  • @koreykendrick5103
    @koreykendrick5103 Před 3 lety +13

    She's a hater! At the end she said you can literally spend your money on anything else. Cryogenics gives people hope! I'm fighting to live, not living to die.

  • @koby_in_renaissance
    @koby_in_renaissance Před 3 lety +5

    I WANT TO BE CRYOGENICALLY FROZEN I WANT TO LIVE FOREVER

  • @enriqueatentar8876
    @enriqueatentar8876 Před 4 lety +7

    What if We build an Space Cemeteries on the Moon to preserve our corpse without Chemicals?

  • @user-lf6uu4ce9x
    @user-lf6uu4ce9x Před rokem +1

    I’m terrified of death just nearly had a panic attack thinking about it

  • @Lastman10101
    @Lastman10101 Před 4 lety +8

    Korean drama melting me softly

  • @IonianGarden
    @IonianGarden Před 4 lety +7

    Betteridge's law of headlines.

  • @Noneblue39
    @Noneblue39 Před 4 lety +5

    interesting idea thats known by people but i agree the scale up from cells to a human is not that straight forward

  • @decoduboc6022
    @decoduboc6022 Před 2 lety +4

    I'm already dead inside, can i get frozen to be revived in the future?

  • @KentPetersonmoney
    @KentPetersonmoney Před 2 lety +3

    If this ever becomes possible it might be possible to meet your great grandparents great grandparents.

  • @jonas90.
    @jonas90. Před 4 lety +13

    Not that much related, but on a side note, i think it's more possible that science in the next 100 years helps our life expectancy increases to double (~160-170 years old) that our actual amount than to restore dead frozen people. Still, i think it's worth taking a shot if you have the money and still scientifically possible (but remote) if you believe.

    • @HAIRHOLIC_1
      @HAIRHOLIC_1 Před 2 lety +2

      As a nursing home nurse, I can tell you right now that nobody wants to live that long. We had a patient who was 106 and all she wanted was to die, she was in good health and sound mounded too, many of our patients are over 100 and none of them wants to live longer, for some is actually a torture, many of them pray and beg everyday to just die.

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem +1

      @@HAIRHOLIC_1 oh my God are you serious? Is this literally everyone aged 100+ or just some? Please reply I'm so curious.

    • @HAIRHOLIC_1
      @HAIRHOLIC_1 Před rokem +3

      @@MeganVictoriaKearns not everyone but most of them, the ones that don’t want to die are just scared of death and they get anxious about it, but the rest they come to terms with it and just wait for it, many are eager to die, they are fed up with life, before working in a nursing home I didn’t know how normal it was for the elderly to say that they want to die, now I’m amazed how many times they say it just in a day very common behavior.

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem

      @@HAIRHOLIC_1 Wow. That's so sad but somehow fascinating to me for some reason. I was only close to my grandparents on my Mom's side, and they died at age 63 and 68. So I don't have much experience talking with elderly people or people with their health in a poor enough condition to necessitate living in a nursing home or assisted living.
      Anyway, thank you for the reply. As I said, I was very curious about what you had to say on this subject.
      Thanks again! 😊💜💜💜

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem

      @@Random_userr Does she talk about it like she is just discussing an inevitable event in her life? Given her age, I mean, she knows it's going to happen one day. Or is she talking about it like she's ready to go? Like she's looking forward to passing on?

  • @metin5408
    @metin5408 Před 3 lety +4

    "giant robotic spider legs"
    i see what you did there

  • @bradypetz7199
    @bradypetz7199 Před 3 lety +2

    Weird thing is for them if somehow they found a way to bring them back they died then came right back but in the future

  • @foldr
    @foldr Před 4 lety +6

    This video would have been better if you had discussed the topic with cryonics proponents to get a clear picture of their actual claims and positions. It's generally assumed that some form of molecular repair, or something equivalent, will be needed *before* the cells are thawed, so all the talk about cells surviving thawing or not is irrelevant. Cryonicists don't mainly fear ice crystals because they kill cells, but because ice crystals mechanically displace and scramble tissues in ways which are not fully understood, and there's a risk that the healthy state of the neuron can't be inferred from its damaged state, so even molecular repair would be useless. It may well be that the information is preserved after all, even in straight frozen brains, but vitrified brains look much better under the microscope, with our limited observation technologies, so it seems a safer bet. It's true that cell viability is emphasized as a convenient and useful proxy to measure the general quality of the cryopreservation, but the growing interest among many cronicists in effective but very lethal techniques such as ASC (aldehyde-stabilized cryopreservation) goes to show that for them it's ultimately about preserving information, not cell viability as such.
    The way ice crystals damage cells is not accurately portrayed either. For starters, the cooling process in cryonics (at least in the old protocols that invoved significant ice formation) is very slow, to avoid the formation of intracellular ice. Again, not because intracellular ice takes up more space than liquid water, but because it tends to displace, crush (not burst) and otherwise damage organelles, membranes and other vital parts of the cell. Now, extracellular ice tends to remove water from cells, IOW cells are dehydrated to the point they collapse (not burst) and are chemically damaged by the rising ion concentration. This ice can also displace and mechanically damage the extracellular matrix, and dislodge cells from their original spots.
    The point of the worm experiment is to show that memories can survive LN2 temperatures. We already knew they survive a flat EEG and near-freezing temperatures in humans, and we already knew that some relatively large animals like frogs survive freezing (but not to LN2 temperatures) and that tiny animals like C elegans survive freezing to LN2 temperatures, but we didn't know whether these remember anything after behing thawed. Now we do.

  • @nuc13ar
    @nuc13ar Před 2 lety +3

    i personally dont think its possible to fully freeze a human and bring them back no matter how you do it

  • @sjpavur
    @sjpavur Před rokem +15

    It would be just my luck for my brain to wake up, and realize I was cryogenically frozen, but be unable to move, or speak, or even let anyone know that I was alive! Can you imagine spending hundreds of years in that state? It is like surgical awareness that sometimes occurs to a patient under anesthesia, who is undergoing surgery. They are aware of what is going on, but paralyzed, and cannot let anyone know.

    • @DucknCoverin
      @DucknCoverin Před rokem

      No need to worry about that. Your organs and circulatory system will be pumped full of toxic cryoprotectant as your body is taken to an unsurvivable temperature. If you weren’t really dead when they started in on you, you will be.

    • @m0nkey162
      @m0nkey162 Před 4 měsíci

      you would be very lucky to wake up from death 400 years later

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      That is not a thing that can happen.

  • @GuessMyName234
    @GuessMyName234 Před rokem +1

    I don't know what's more scary the thought of dying or living forever

  • @Zawnpuia1640
    @Zawnpuia1640 Před 2 lety +2

    Imagine waking up in a universe court after being frozen

  • @spork5676
    @spork5676 Před 4 lety +2

    The only thing I want to know is, will I have to help a settlement

  • @gigma.8492
    @gigma.8492 Před 2 lety +2

    They are supposed to take out the blood because when it's unthawed, it can turn into tiny ice shards and tear apart your blood vessels.

  • @haveyouseenchef4531
    @haveyouseenchef4531 Před rokem +1

    Hope is slim sure, especially looking through a Lense of our current understanding.
    My thought is if you have the expendable money (which already rules out a lot of people unfortunately) and you are not frozen until you actually are declared dead, you really have nothing to lose. You either just remain dead or you get revived at some point. Only downside is attempting to acclimate to whatever era you are brought into.
    Also fun tangent, lots of people bring up “what if you are brought back and the world is waring/diseased/collapsing” ie: ‘the world is not a good place to be’. I can’t help but think if it was really that bad, they wouldn’t bring you back

    • @anonymous5102
      @anonymous5102 Před rokem +1

      That's why I plan on enlisting in the US army because when you are discharged or retire you get a shit ton of bread (aka money)

  • @MrPillowStudios
    @MrPillowStudios Před rokem

    Such a crazy idea...

  • @deanrobert8674
    @deanrobert8674 Před 4 lety +4

    What about Paulys mate he was found in a block of ice ?

  • @Ajwad99
    @Ajwad99 Před 3 lety +5

    I do believe that someday maybe in the near future humans will be able to live forever or for a long time at least, i think it’s easier for scientists to make a human being keep living than bringing back a frozen corpse

    • @Lee-cr6xb
      @Lee-cr6xb Před 2 lety +1

      Some time ago i saw a post telling about a young girl with deasease that couldnt be cured nowadays. She wished to be frozen so she would be revived many years later when it would be possible to cure her. Not sure about more details.

    • @RealParadoxed
      @RealParadoxed Před 2 lety

      Man that's sad af

    • @ZZ-rc1yw
      @ZZ-rc1yw Před 2 lety +2

      I feel like by 2050 we'll have some technology or things that can bring our life longevity

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      Sure. So the frozen corpses only get brought back 100 years after immortality is invented. So what?
      (Or actually 5 minutes after, because once superhuman AI starts inventing stuff, science progress happens FAST!)

  • @AdityaMehendale
    @AdityaMehendale Před 4 lety +12

    Kudos on the "Phil" reference :) - Better off Ted - the best TV series EVER that got cancelled after just 2 seasons :(

  • @PianoMeetsMetal
    @PianoMeetsMetal Před 2 lety +5

    I feel like even if you were frozen with Cryogenics, you wouldn't wake up how you would expect it.
    For all we know, their opinions on human rights could even be a lot different from now.
    They might throw us into a simulation, and make us replay our past lives over and over again to obtain information about the past. (I would hate it, but its still a possibility.)
    Or we might already be revived, and are recuperating in some kind of "Past Generator" that helps our brains recall our memories so we don't go into shock when our minds are revived.
    You know, I've had some vivid and short dreams of the future since I was young. I would have short visions then they would occur in real life out of nowhere.
    As if it was replaying something that had already happened. However, I usually immediately forget about these visions after waking up, and they only come back to me when I experience them in real life. It just clicks like: "Ah, this is that dream I had back then..."
    I've actually managed to make a few small changes, but the butterfly effect doesn't really do what we expect it to.
    Its like the past and future try to patch things together to conserve energy. The other dreams that I had before still pop up as well.
    If you're wondering, there isn't a set sequence in which these dreams happen. Dream 1 could happen after Dream 2, and vice versa.
    Still, these dreams happen anyway. Despite the small changes I make. Recently however, its become more difficult to make any changes.
    As if I were being monitored and forced to follow the timeline. By the time I remember something, its already happened, or I remember in that moment and end up following the set path anyway.
    I've also had moments where in those dreams I realize that its a future vision, and tell myself to try and change it.
    Like sitting down at a computer screen, then getting up as if someone was coming. Trying to open the door and catch them to prove the future.
    I proceed to then follow the dream exactly without a single change like I realize its that vision dream, and I get up from the computer thinking someone is coming and open the door.
    But no one comes. By the time all of this ends, I realize that I just followed some kind of set determined path despite realizing it was going to happen.
    Believe me or not about this, but I feel like I may not be the only person in this world this happens to.
    There must be something more than what we humans know about reality and how it works.
    Perhaps science is just a way of satisfying our doubts and preventing us from finding out the truth.
    Or maybe science is something that is built along the way, and appears out of thin air to fill in the holes that get left behind in our reality.
    Does anyone else happen to get the same kind of vision dreams by any chance?

    • @randomshit65
      @randomshit65 Před rokem +2

      Man you need a dream journal

    • @claudio7010
      @claudio7010 Před rokem

      that's called a deja vu, and it's just an impression although it feels real

    • @OfficialDenzy
      @OfficialDenzy Před 9 měsíci

      I remember some thing like this when I was a kid. I would have visions of something literally happening a minute after or somewhere in the future. I was very lucky alot and would know and be confident at certain things. For example if Ihad to choose a number between 1-100 and if you choose the right number you would win a prize. I would just know what the number was (I don't know why). But stuff like this sadly doesn't happen anymore.

    • @OfficialDenzy
      @OfficialDenzy Před 2 měsíci

      Science is following the scientific model, which can not describe the supernatural. You need religion for that.
      Edit: lol I didn't even know I already commented 6 months ago.

  • @BrogeKilrain
    @BrogeKilrain Před 4 lety +2

    There is a device that can freeze your body but not have your cells damaged . Used to transport transplants

  • @7LemonFire11
    @7LemonFire11 Před 4 lety +11

    Hold on, Are you seriously saying that the crazy scientist from the outer worlds talkin about rapid cellular explosion was telling the truth?!

    • @duongdieuhuyen1542
      @duongdieuhuyen1542 Před 3 lety

      Hold on, Are you seriously saying that the crazy scientist from the outer worlds talkin about rapid cellular explosion was telling the truth?!

    • @JacobHayden911
      @JacobHayden911 Před 2 lety

      Hold on, Are you seriously saying that the crazy scientist from the outer worlds talkin about rapid cellular explosion was telling the truth?!

    • @joshuaortiz4098
      @joshuaortiz4098 Před 2 lety

      Hold on, Are you seriously saying that the crazy scientist from the outer worlds talkin about rapid cellular explosion was telling the truth?!

  • @KudoShinichikun
    @KudoShinichikun Před 2 lety +1

    Either way guys you have only one life love it to the fullest and enjoy it

  • @braden1476
    @braden1476 Před 3 lety

    It's too scary to die, I'll have to be carried inside a cemetery, and buried alive

  • @k65_md
    @k65_md Před 3 lety

    If this did work, the frozen people will not know of any of this like it would be a second and they're in the future

  • @Blueskies2513
    @Blueskies2513 Před rokem

    So that is how the head museum works

  • @jonnajohnsons2684
    @jonnajohnsons2684 Před 3 lety +2

    Well if they die they die but if they are lucky and able to come back to life than it’s worth it

  • @kidsIIIII009
    @kidsIIIII009 Před rokem +1

    I would love to be frozen inside the capsule and get the best sleep forever

  • @neianag3076
    @neianag3076 Před 3 lety +1

    me after watching melting me softly

  • @vvho2428
    @vvho2428 Před 3 lety +2

    I want this to be possible

  • @djfrozen4534
    @djfrozen4534 Před 4 lety +2

    If you freeze yourself hoping to come back to life in the future.. what about the cycle of once you die you are reborn again.. would that still happened if you are frozen for years?

    • @itsjake6166
      @itsjake6166 Před 4 lety +1

      DJ Frozen what

    • @zenghost6306
      @zenghost6306 Před 3 lety

      Reincarnation?

    • @PianoMeetsMetal
      @PianoMeetsMetal Před 2 lety +1

      It would feel like an instant to you probably.
      I think your soul would be frozen in time trapped in the body, then instantly wake up when its revived.
      Souls don't have the concept of time. They are eternal, and travel through time freely at their own pace. Whether slow or fast.
      To our souls it would just be like blinking then opening their eyes.
      Think of it this way:
      When people talk about reincarnation after death, when does it happen?
      Instantly after death, or 100 years later? Even a 1000 years later? Like the reincarnation of Leonidas from the BC Greek Spartan ages.
      The soul doesn't really care about the concept of time most likely. I'm guessing it chooses what it wants to do on a whim, or when it feels right.
      The soul isn't really something we can grasp or even explain. When people talk about "Spiritual" things its usually something we cannot grasp with our human minds.
      We can only "Feel" and "Experience" it.
      Interesting question though. While my answer has a ton of holes, these are my thoughts.
      Still, there are plenty of times when people talk about reincarnation.
      While not proven true at all, there are some people who claim to have been "Reincarnated" like a grandson having memories of his grandfather's life despite never being told about them.

  • @ishkibable
    @ishkibable Před 2 lety

    Hopefully we’re almost near a breakthrough of human Torpor

  • @rhodesfamily2008
    @rhodesfamily2008 Před 2 lety +4

    Well, so much for having myself frozen after death and coming back in a few hundred years. This vid sucked the fun right out of that plan. Lol!

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      This video misses the point.
      Getting frozen with current tech makes sense, if you think future medicine will be Crazy advanced, and able to fix the messed up state that current freezing leaves you in.

  • @TunaSampaio
    @TunaSampaio Před 4 měsíci

    Yes please

  • @taffygore6285
    @taffygore6285 Před 4 lety +2

    I first witnessed this on captain caveman

  • @primenumberbuster404
    @primenumberbuster404 Před rokem

    Imagine waking up 100 years later and have to catch up 😮

  • @Vennasiddhu
    @Vennasiddhu Před 3 lety +2

    is it possible to store a living body theoretically. pls answer

  • @zaybx3485
    @zaybx3485 Před 4 lety +4

    So basically futeruma in a nutshell

  • @futurethewolf5624
    @futurethewolf5624 Před rokem

    4:02 Untill now!

  • @bryanobee1730
    @bryanobee1730 Před 2 lety +1

    At that point I'd assume humanity wouldn't even bother reviving dead people, they'd be out conquering the universe

  • @ChaoticSpud
    @ChaoticSpud Před 2 lety

    If I ever get terminally ill, freeze my head Less than most of my body to protect it

  • @mystwalker479
    @mystwalker479 Před 3 lety +1

    Well i mean i respect people who do this despite the truth if it's for contributing science

  • @hyperspeedz7135
    @hyperspeedz7135 Před rokem

    Honestly cryofrezing is scary like when I think about it it makes me cry a bit like on one hand ur practically immortal but on the other hand everyone and everything u once known or loved is dead so it’s a double edged sword

    • @Max040fficial
      @Max040fficial Před rokem

      Not to mention that it would pretty much just be like being on a coma for years while you are still alive for the chances of being woken up god knows if it’s just black with a few noises here and there unable to speak

  • @Inv_Enot
    @Inv_Enot Před rokem

    I want to do this, it would be cool but I wanna tell ‘em don’t bring me back till we can reverse age, I don’t wanna be frozen early in life, I wanna be frozen after I die so I can live my life normally then be revived and reverse my age a bit

  • @Darlvua
    @Darlvua Před 2 lety +1

    I can imagine waking up and ppl being like "wow it actually worked" or "we're literally living with someone fron the past omlll"

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Před rokem

      Yeah, it'd be exactly like how today's scientists would react if the tech necessary to reanimate Egyptian mummies suddenly existed.

  • @LogicAndReason2025
    @LogicAndReason2025 Před rokem

    How about if someone is given the cryopreservation chemicals while alive as a means of assisted suicide in a place where AS is legal?

  • @jbstepchild
    @jbstepchild Před rokem

    How can a hypothesis with no further evidence make sense to push foward

    • @trumpisaconfirmedcuck5840
      @trumpisaconfirmedcuck5840 Před rokem

      Because we don't have the luxury of time to wait and see if cryonics will work. Hell we don't even want to be cryopreserved, it's still one of the worst things that can happen to you or a loved one. It's just better than being buried or burned.
      When your time is up, you've got to make that choice. Everyone, even cryonicists would rather remain living until cryonics can be proven to work (or not).

    • @Max040fficial
      @Max040fficial Před rokem

      Everybody holds on to the belief of hope and they hold on to your money 😄

  • @awesomenessiscool
    @awesomenessiscool Před 4 lety +6

    At 0:42, did you guys mix up the definition of cryonics and cryogenics?

    • @ACSReactions
      @ACSReactions  Před 4 lety +6

      Cryogenics is the general term for freezing something to preserve it, while cryonics is freezing a dead body or body part part with the intention of bringing it back to life later.

  • @WDCallahan
    @WDCallahan Před 4 lety +2

    Her hands are looking mighty red at the bottom of the frame! What is happening there?

  • @yourhomietema
    @yourhomietema Před 2 lety

    Can I get frozen while alive in 1000 years and go to the future and meet a robot? And a purple haired one eyed mutant?

  • @DStringzzZ
    @DStringzzZ Před 3 lety

    It would be the key to interstellar travel to a new earth. Instead of keeping generations of humans surviving for a 1000 year space trip to our next home, freeze a crew, and let the ship fly itself. Thaw the crew on arrival.

  • @Ashghaus
    @Ashghaus Před 2 lety +1

    what if the technology is so advance it wont work on the outdated cryonic they were preserved in ? ... like trying to run ios14 on iPhone 3gs .... no chance

  • @lynxafrica958
    @lynxafrica958 Před 3 lety +1

    wouldt it make more sense to cause an intense metabolic decrease and a coma, so basically put them in hibernation where as we could probably last 200 years if done correctly and its in our scientific grasp as it literally already exists in nature. also coma patient after a while become retarted but hopefully in 50 years time we could prevent this.

    • @wij8044
      @wij8044 Před 2 lety +1

      I think that may evoke a legal grey area, since it could be seen as a medically induced suicide.

    • @lynxafrica958
      @lynxafrica958 Před 2 lety

      @@wij8044 euthanasia

    • @wij8044
      @wij8044 Před 2 lety

      @@lynxafrica958 but this isn’t euthanasia

  • @ivaapivaa222
    @ivaapivaa222 Před 3 lety

    Anyone here after watching What Happened To Monday??

  • @ario9907
    @ario9907 Před rokem

    Imagine coming back all messed up with no eye sight, no hearing, chronic pain everywhere and cancer or something worse, I’d want to die immediately.

    • @donaldhobson8873
      @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 měsíci

      Imagine having the tech to bring people back but not being able to fix that. I'd leave them frozen for a bit longer until I could fix all those diseases too.

  • @michaelnguyen722
    @michaelnguyen722 Před 3 lety

    What happen if that person is really old like 114

  • @ctafrance
    @ctafrance Před 2 lety +1

    The thing is, if you know you are dying, what do you have to LOSE by trying cryonics? If they are unable to bring you back, well, then you just stay dead, which is what would happen anyway. If they can bring you back, well, you get another chance. Suppose we could measure the likelihood of science learning to reanimate the cryonically frozen. Suppose the likelihood was one tenth of one percent. You're dying. If you don't do it, you have no chance of coming back. If you do cryonic freezing, you have one tenth of one percent chance of coming back. It is a small chance, but, isn't that better than nothing? And, since you're dying, you know what they say about money, you cannot take it with you. Why NOT spend the last of your money on creating this wild one tenth of one percent chance?

  • @avayalde6902
    @avayalde6902 Před 3 lety +1

    WE ALL WANNA LIVE FOR EVER

    • @Ajwad99
      @Ajwad99 Před 3 lety

      Not me. It’s scary

    • @ZZ-rc1yw
      @ZZ-rc1yw Před 2 lety +1

      @@Ajwad99 nah living forever sounds sick. Who tf wants to die. By 2050 we'll probably have technology or things that'll make us somewhat immortal

    • @PinkCrappyAiCovers
      @PinkCrappyAiCovers Před rokem

      @@ZZ-rc1yw hopefully

  • @JJ-el2ky
    @JJ-el2ky Před 2 lety +3

    Lol all you have to do is use the reanimation jutsu

  • @veigasterre5531
    @veigasterre5531 Před 2 lety +1

    Wait what, if dead body is already almost impossible to ressurect then why the hell freezing it and thawing it make it better? I mean, you're dead in the first place and before freezing someone, one have to revive someone back to life just after his death. Rather than damaging more cells when freezing. 🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @misfit4264
    @misfit4264 Před rokem

    Crazy that someone chopped his head off to freeze it 🤯

  • @g.g.g.605
    @g.g.g.605 Před 2 lety

    What if I get frozen alive? I would do it

  • @pcpc5242
    @pcpc5242 Před 4 lety

    the quick answer is yes , the lung answer is yes but you need to wait froz as any one dead in the soil until the loud trumoet bliwn by mighty angel from the earth sky.

  • @paigekyle6162
    @paigekyle6162 Před 3 lety +1

    I wish I can be stay frozen for 2.000 years

  • @Inv_Enot
    @Inv_Enot Před rokem

    I wanna have my head frozen and in the future have a anthro body made then maybe they can modify my head to become a animal hea

  • @dtgdutchtheegeneral9210

    So if it works then the person doesn’t have a soul

  • @smoothingwaters4227
    @smoothingwaters4227 Před rokem

    I’m currently going to get frozen in a year wish me the best of lucks guys

    • @Max040fficial
      @Max040fficial Před rokem

      Well goodluck but before you do it how do you know if it’s going to be like being in acoma?

  • @jailanrayvon434
    @jailanrayvon434 Před 4 lety +3

    The answer is we don’t know

  • @lisakadams3767
    @lisakadams3767 Před rokem

    So you.get on ice and then become reborn? Piece of cake.

  • @zamasuawaken1908
    @zamasuawaken1908 Před 2 lety

    I love how they want to be revived in the future meanwhile the way humanity is going is left uncertain if the earth will still be standing few decades from now Lmao

  • @theworld9025
    @theworld9025 Před 4 lety +6

    Death. cannot be cheated.

    • @fineapple3435
      @fineapple3435 Před 4 lety

      Haha, depressing!

    • @izralsei7617
      @izralsei7617 Před 4 lety +1

      Until we get advanced enough ;)

    • @zenghost6306
      @zenghost6306 Před 3 lety +1

      IzRalsei } you can’t cheat death though once your time is done you time done

    • @AshtonQulay
      @AshtonQulay Před 3 lety +2

      You're right it can't be cheated but it can be prolonged 😉