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The Naovaratpong family chose Alcor, an Arizona-based non-profit organisation that is the leading provider of what it calls "life extension" services, to carry out the preservation of Einz's brain.
The family was closely involved in the preparations, designing the special coffin in which she would be transported to the United States. A standby team from Alcor flew to Thailand to supervise the initial cooling of the body. As the little girl deteriorated, she was moved from hospital to her own room.
The moment she was pronounced dead, the Alcor team begin what is known as "cryoprotection"; removing bodily fluids and replacing them with forms of anti-freeze that allow the body to be deep frozen without suffering large-scale tissue damage. After arriving in Arizona her brain was extracted, and is preserved at a temperature of C.
She is Alcor's th patient, and by far its youngest. Sahatorn's description of the procedure sounds like the stuff of science fiction, even brutally clinical, when you remember this was after all the moment of loss of a much-loved daughter.
But the family are very clear about their feelings. Although we fought to be strong, when she had passed away, we were no different from other families; we cried every day. We still need time to heal. In his mind, Einz's thoughts and personality are preserved with her brain at Alcor, and may at some stage be enough for her life to be reconstructed.
He and his wife also plan to have their own bodies preserved cryogenically, although he acknowledges there is little chance they will be able to meet Einz again in their new lives. They also plan to visit the Alcor facility, to see the steel container in which Einz's brain is being kept in what the company calls "biostasis".
The Naovaratpongs say they have donated similar sums of money to what they have spent on Einz's cryopreservation to cancer research in Thailand. The science of putting off death. Source: Alcor Life Extension Foundation. He demanded Dora's head for further testing, and Alcor refused to produce it. Some of the Alcor members were arrested, but nothing came of it and no one was ever charged with anything.
Jerry Leaf was Alcor's vice president until his death in , so it only stands to reason that he was frozen when he died of heart attack. Ted Williams is without a doubt the most famous cryogenically frozen person that we know of.
But the circumstances surrounding his freezing are a bit controversial. His son, John-Henry Williams, was adamant that his father wanted to be preserved to be brought back in the future, and wanted his whole family to follow suit so they could be reunited when technology and medicine made it possible.
However, Ted's will said he wanted to be cremated, and his daughter by his first wife took John-Henry to court over the matter. Why would you write your last wishes on a cocktail napkin and expect it to hold up in court? Anyway, after much debate over authenticity, the napkin-pact was allowed and Ted was frozen.
Which leads us to number eight John-Henry Williams. Yep, Ted's son stayed true to his word. Despite a bone marrow transplant from his sister, John-Henry died of leukemia on March 6, , and joined his dad at Alcor in Scottsdale, Arizona. Noticeably missing from the list? Terms Privacy Policy. Part of HuffPost News. All rights reserved. But what exactly is cryogenic preservation? What is Cryogenics? How does cryogenic preservation work? Cryogenic preservation allows living cells to be stored at ultra-low temperatures.
Does it work? It is not yet possible to restore someone to life who has been cryogenically preserved. Who has been cryogenically preserved?
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