Humans frozen by cryogenics ‘could be brought back to life in 10 years’

Company offers its employees bonus of eternal life with cryonic freezing perk if they die at work
Company offers its employees bonus of eternal life with cryonic freezing perk if they die at work

Around the world, hundreds of people have had their bodies frozen at extremely low temperatures, just after death – in the hope that they can be revived in the future.

Some are so confident that they’ll ‘wake up’ in the future that their loved ones have left them voicemail messages.

But the moment when people can be revived by science could come sooner than we expect, according to Dennis Kowalski of Michigan’s Cryonics Institute.

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Kowalski told the Daily Star, ‘If you take something like CPR, that would have seemed unbelievable 100 years ago. Now we take that technology for granted.

‘Cryonically bringing someone back to life should definitely be doable in 100 years, but it could be as soon as ten.’

Russian company, KrioRus, offers cryonic services, including cryoconservation and storage, opening up the possibility of waking up the future.
Russian company, KrioRus, offers cryonic services, including cryoconservation and storage, opening up the possibility of waking up the future.

Companies pump people’s brains full of ‘cryoprotectant’ fluid before being frozen – in the hope the brains will last decades or even hundreds of years.

Many ‘cryonics’ fans have their heads frozen – not their whole bodies – imagining that in the future, brain transplants will be possible.

Kowalski says that innovations in technologies such as stem cells may make it possible to revive frozen bodies at some point in the future.

Another tech company, Humai is monitoring developments in robotics, medical treatments – and believes people will ‘come back from the dead’ within 30 years.

The company believes that within three decades, technology will have advanced so that people can freeze their brains – then have them transplanted into an artificial, robot-like body after death.

CEO Josh Bocanegra told Popular Science, ‘We’ll first collect extensive data on our members for years prior to their death via various apps we’re developing.

‘After death we’ll freeze the brain using cryonics technology. When the technology is fully developed we’ll implant the brain into an artificial body. The artificial body functions will be controlled with your thoughts by measuring brain waves.

‘As the brain ages we’ll use nanotechnology to repair and improve cells. Cloning technology is going to help with this too.