You should ask for a third-party audit of your cryopreservation
Hello (potential) cryonics customer, you should ask for third-party audit of your cryopreservation. This ensures that the cryonics providers aren’t performing the procedure badly, say through negligence, ignorance, or something else.
Specifically, you should ask that the following be sent to an imaging specialist of your choice AFTER your brain has been preserved
An x-ray of your preserved brain, and
A needle biopsy of a few brain areas (say, the frontal cortex, parietal cortex, brain stem, basal ganglia, and thalamus)
The x-ray will roughly show if large parts of your brain were not preserved well. Micrographs of the biopsy samples will show in fine detail (tens of nanometers resolution) the quality of your preservation.
This information will give your loved ones peace of mind that you’ve maxed your chances of revival and it will also give other cryonics customers confidence that your cryoprovider is worth paying money to.
These auditing requirements come from a video by the Brain Preservation Foundation (BPF), Preservation Done Right, and from their article, Vitrifying the Connectomic Self (p. 5, 2nd para).
Disclaimer: I volunteer for the BPF, and am an ex-Alcor member.
Has anyone done this, anywhere?
I don’t know. Alcor offered to send my agents the post-mortem CT scan, but haven’t gotten back about biopsies.
Cryopreservation causes lots of damage, always. What would this show?
Brain biopsies, especially by cryo staff, sound dangerous.
Is there any indication that cryo companies would comply with this? What would associated costs be?
Cryopreservation doesn’t have to cause damage. For instance, Aldehyde Stabilized Cryopreservation (on pigs) doesn’t https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cryobiol.2015.09.003
Brain biopsies are performed in hospitals e.g. during brain cancer diagnostics. They should not be dangerous to perform
I don’t know.
I don’t think this is done at any of the main cryonics organizations, right? Their methods are damaging in perhaps less predictable ways than this mechanism.
I think the statement
is deceptive and I wouldn’t want it being shared without further context. I had a conversation with my expert-friend about this method and the type of damage it causes.
Quoting some parts of my text message conversation with this expert friend who wishes to be anonymous:
Regarding your second response:
The first paper I looked at on brain biopsies (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10143-019-01234-w) says:
That sounds like a high risk of being very damaging to me, and that’s from one biopsy by expert medical staff vs. your proposed multiple by non-experts.
I think we agree that a safe audit would be desirable. We differ in thinking that the toxicity of ASC is a dealbreaker. Is this accurate?
The most detailed studies of the brain today, which show the locations of dozens of memory-related proteins, are done using aldehydes (the A in ASC) so I hope to be revived as an emulation; I have little hope that my physical body can be rewarmed as is partly because of the difficulty of getting cryoprotectant to every part of the brain.
Come to think of it, if you could be preserved pre-mortem in a territory where that is legal, and then had your body preserved at −135 °C (ABOVE liquid nitrogen temperature and above the temp at which cracks form in the brain), then the body might be viable into the future...
Wouldn’t the preservee have to provide their consent for this ahead of time? I’ve recently signed up for Alcor, I’d be very pro this being an option they explicitly offer to their customers.