Finally, he claims that he is putting a German cryogenic against a rather high amount. It’s about the company Tomorrow. Bio which for 195,000 euros “freezes” its customers after their death hoping that at some point in the future she will be able to bring them back to life by defeating death. CORVERSE As the BBC reports, Emil Kendziorra, who is one of the founders of the company, believes that medicine can in the future defeat death and restore some people to life. This method is applied by Tomorrow.Bio to “3-4 people” and five animals at an hour when about 700 people have agreed to enter this process. “No one ever came back successfully after cold maintenance and, even if it did, the possible result could be to revive with severe brain damage. The fact that there is currently no evidence that organisms with brain structures as complex as humans can successfully be restored makes the whole process “unreasonable”, says Clive Coen, a neuroscience professor at King’s College, London. Tomorrow.Bio for her part is optimistic that she will implement her goals. CORVERSE What the process Initially the interested parties should sign that they want to follow this process. Then a doctor confirms that a man is in the last days of his life and the company sends an ambulance. When death is found legally, the patient is transferred to the ambulance at Tomorrow.Bio, where the cryonic process begins, i.e. the maintenance of his body. The body cools to temperatures below zero and is given cryoprotective fluid. According to Kendziorra, “as soon as you drop below 0 points, you don’t want to freeze the body, you want to cool it. Otherwise, you’ll have ice crystals everywhere and the tissue will be destroyed. To avoid this, you replace water and anything that can freeze inside the body with cryoprotective fluid. After doing so, you cool very fast at about -125 degrees Celsius, and then very slowly from -125 degrees Celsius to – 196 degrees. Once the final temperature is reached, the patient is transferred to a unit in Switzerland, where he expects his “rebirth”. Two hours clinically dead and returned There are cases that in some the heart stopped at low temperatures and then “lived”. An example was Anna Bagenholm, who in 1999 spent two hours clinically dead during a skiing holiday in Norway, but later came back According to Kendziorra, “the goal is to develop medical technology so much in the future, that cancer or any disease that led the patient to death would become fully curable and the entire cooling process could be reversed.” It does not matter if this objective becomes a reality in 50, 100 or even 1,000 years. “As long as you keep the temperature at these low levels, you can maintain a body in this condition theoretically forever”. He then added that… “many things that have so far not been proven to work, may work. It’s just nobody has attempted it.” As he says historically, all medical interventions were treated with skepticism, before they were widely accepted and incorporated into our everyday life. The same happened with the transplant of the human heart when it was first attempted. “To take a heart from one human body and put it into another seemed odd at first, but now we do it every day”. Emil Kendziorra considers that the same will happen with cryogenics. In 2023 there was an experiment with rodent kidneys left frozen for 100 days. When they returned to normal temperatures and removed cryoprotective substances, they were transplanted into rodents and the kidneys functioned normally within 30 days. This gives them hope, but under no circumstances can one say that it will work the same way to people.
German cryogenic company argues that “defeat” death – With 195,000 euros you live forever
—
in World