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  • This video is sponsored by Tomorrow Biostasis.

  • Hey there!

  • Welcome to Life Noggin!

  • The world of sci-fi is filled with examples where someone was frozen and then reanimated

  • sometime in the future.

  • But of course, this is just fiction, right?

  • Oh yeah.

  • I'm the one doing the video.

  • You shouldn't be answering.

  • Sorry.

  • It turns out that, one day, this may be possible.

  • Companies have even already frozen hundreds of people in the hopes that future science

  • and medicine will be able to bring them back to life.

  • And who could blame them?

  • Who wouldn't want to live longer or experience what life is like in the future?

  • Unless the future is bad.

  • But I think the future should be good.

  • This practice is called cryogenic preservation, or cryopreservation.

  • It is commonly performed on biological materials like semen, eggs, embryos, tissue, and organs

  • to protect them from decay until it's time to implant them into a living body.

  • But unlike cells and tissues, and the examples in science fiction, to legally cryopreserve

  • someone, they must first be declared dead.

  • Then the cryopreservation company they signed up with can take them and begin the preservation

  • process.

  • This needs to begin as soon as possible since the cells throughout the body will stop receiving

  • oxygen and begin to die, and is done by rapidly cooling the body.

  • No, it's not done by throwing someone into a freezerbut through a process called vitrification.

  • Unlike freezing, where liquid turns into the solid crystalline, during vitrification, liquid

  • solidifies into a glass-like state without any ice formation that can damage tissues

  • in the body., This is accomplished through a series of steps:

  • After the initial cooling to slow down cellular death, the blood is replaced with cryoprotective

  • agents that act like antifreeze, lowering the freezing point of water so ice doesn't

  • form inside the body.,

  • Once the person is transported to a long-term care facility, they are cooled down even further,

  • to -196 degrees Celsius, and placed in a vacuum-sealed tank filled with liquid nitrogen until it's

  • time to revive them.

  • The cost of cryopreservation and long-term storage is around $200,000 and can even get

  • up to $400,000.

  • However, this doesn't need to be paid the moment you sign up.

  • There are life insurance plans that provide decades of coverage for only about $30 per

  • month.

  • There are still many unknowns about what the future will hold for people who are cryogenically

  • preserved.

  • Such as how the vitrification, warming, and revival processes will affect their brains

  • and bodies.

  • As of now, no one has been revived after being cryogenically preserved.

  • And even setting thebringing someone back from the deadaspect aside, the toxic cryoprotective

  • agents and the ice crystals that could form during warming can greatly injure the body.,,

  • So, in addition to reviving the dead, future scientists will have to have thoroughly addressed

  • these dangers as well before anyone can come back to life.

  • While we are still a long way off from this, scientists are already identifying better

  • and safer cryoprotective agents.

  • And recent experiments have even found that roundworms can survive the cryopreservation

  • and warming processes, grow into adults, and retain their long-term memory.

  • So, at the end of the day, what do you have to lose?

  • Ya know, you're already going to be dead so...

  • when i freeze it's because something is wrong with the computer, and then the computer crashes,

  • and then i enter the void.

  • The void is so cold.

  • It is not pleasant.

  • So would you wanna do this?

  • Would you wanna be cryogenically preserved?

  • Let me know in the comment section below.

  • Why or why not?

  • Huge shoutout to Tomorrow Biostasis for sponsoring this video.

  • If you are interested in learning more or signing yourself up I highly recommend checking

  • out their site.

  • Okay.

  • Let's see what else is on.

  • Coming up next we have a 10-year-old boy who's somehow allowed to travel with the world with

  • an electric mouse!

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  • Ooh.

  • Triangle Bob is jumping off the high dive!

  • As always, my name is Blocko, this has been life noggin, don't forget to keep on thinking!

This video is sponsored by Tomorrow Biostasis.

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