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Experiments conducted by
Russian scientists show that survival of a living being is
possible
People used to make fun of
anabiosis in the past. There were quite a few trashy
"sci-fi" books and
films about
freezing people and bringing them back to life in the
future. There were only two people who did not use corny
jokes while writing about anabiosis in the 1960s. Robert
Attinger was one of them. He published a book titled "The
Prospects of Immortality" in 1964. The famous Soviet surgeon
Nikolai Amosov was the other one. Both of the above wrote
about a distant future when scientists come up with ways of
freezing the human body and warm it up without causing
irreparable damage to its tissues. However, those two men
were not the only scientists who were racking their
brains
over the problem. The Dutch self-taught scientist Anthony
Van Levenguk was the one who showed original interest in
what later became anabiosis.
More than 300 years ago, on September 1,
1701, Van Levenguk spotted a phenomenon eventually called a
"paradox of hidden life." The scientist was looking at
microorganisms as they lay under the lens of his microscope.
The microorganisms, red wheel animalcules, would come back
to life soon after some water was poured over the dry sand
they lay in. They would look dead and listless once water
began to dry out. They would be resuscitated by a drop of
water
over and over again.
Many a scientist conducted
successful cold anabiosis experiments involving plants and
simple
life
forms. But nobody ever succeeded experimenting with
warm-blooded creatures. Let us carry out a couple of simple
experiments to find out why all experiments with
warm-blooded creatures always ended in failure.
Let us place a plastic bottle
filled with water into a freezer. Then we will examine the
contents of the bottle. We will see numerous large and small
cracks running through ice. Size and shape of the cracks
vary due to temperature fluctuations during the freezing and
defrosting of water.
Now let us put an egg, a living
object, into a freezer. A closer look at the thawed out egg
will show the eggshell will be cracked all over and the
contents of the egg will be damaged too. The egg will be
irretrievably spoiled.
Things that happen to living cells during their freezing and
defrosting resemble a horror movie. Ice crystals mangle the
cell membranes, all inner structures are crushed and pierced
through. That is why cryogenics never took off as a
practical branch of
science
. A lack of rational idea entails a lack of funds. Science
fiction technology does not entail financing.
Years ago a team of Soviet
scientists headed by Academician Vladimir Kovanov carried
out a series of spectacular experiments involving
hypothermia of the warm-blooded animals. Drawing from the
results of the experiments, the researchers came up with a
theory of anabiosis for large living organisms.
The research was eventually
terminated due to lack of financing after the collapse of
the
Soviet Union
. Vladimir Kovanov passed away. The team broke up. The buzz
stirred in the scientific world by the findings of the team
died away.
Pavel Sherbakov, a former
member of the team, shared his views about progress made by
the Kovanov team in the research of human anabiosis.
Sherbakov was the only member of the team who was
specialized in the study of thermal properties of the living
organism.
"We were the first ones who
could reach the bottom level of hypothermia for the
warm-blooded
organism at zero degrees Celsius. We were able to bring back
to life 100% of animals subjected to freezing. The
temperature was lowered to the freezing point of water. Then
the temperature was raised to regular body temperature
level. The minimum of zero degrees Celsius was maintained
for 95 minutes. During that period of time animals were kept
in a state of clinical death. The cardiac activity was
reported to have stopped at three degrees Celsius.
"The results of the experiments
show that a guinea pig will die if thawed at 0.6 degrees per
minute after an abrupt freezing to 0 degrees Celsius.
Thawing out the lab animal at 0.2 degrees per minute will
kill it too. However, there is a 'window' of opportunity
somewhere in between. All the laboratory animals survive if
thawed at 0.4 degrees Celsius. All their vital functions get
back to normal."
"We drew up a diagram showing
the temperature drops and surges of the fortunate situation
resulting in complete survival of the animals. The
temperatures drop sharply at the beginning. Then the
temperatures rise slowly, they stay at a minimum of 0
degrees Celsius during that 95-minute period. My colleague
jokingly dubbed the diagram a 'hypothermic hole.' The point
is an animal can survive if it passes through that hole."
"It sounds like a scientific
sensation."
"It certainly does. Our foreign
colleagues all over the world regarded it as a remarkable
discovery. For example, we received two letters from Dr.
Ferrera, head of the laboratory of thermoregulation studies
at the Claude Bernar University in France. He actually
requested details of our findings because he doubted the
media reports on our success in hypothermia experiments with
the warm-blooded animals. Our work made headlines at the
international media. Alas, scientists in this country gave
us the cold shoulder."
"We had to deal with yet
another setback. I mean the so-called 'anabiotic hole.' Its
minimum can reach the absolute temperature zero level, minus
237 degrees Celsius. It is more difficult to get out of the
hole than dive in it. But a living organism can survive even
under such harsh conditions. The experiments showed that
survival was possible. We put hearts, blood and semen of the
lab animals into an anabiotic capsule designed and built by
our team. We used liquid nitrogen for freezing the specimens
at minus 196 degrees Celsius. Then we brought them back to
life by defrosting. Unfortunately, our research program came
to a halt following the breakup of the Soviet Union."
"Mr. Sherbakov, it seems that
the findings and discoveries made by you research team have
been in a lengthy state of anabiosis. What should be done to
make them thaw?
"The answer is simple - money.
But there is no point in looking for sponsors in the usual
places. They would not allocate funds for projects that
still look like science fiction."
"Maybe you had better look for
some moneybags who can pay for preserving their bodies until
better times?"
"Maybe you are right, the idea
is worth thinking over. I know that there are four cryonic
companies operating in the U.S. They freeze the terminally
ill at the request and expense of customers. Given the
methods and lousy cryonic protectors used by those
companies, they look like some weird funeral homes, as far
as I am concerned. I wish we could set up a joint venture
and use our super cryonic protector and their financial
potential."
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