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Two Year Old Thai Girl Cryogenically Preserved

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BANGKOK – Two-year-old Matheryn Naovaratpong who died from a brain tumour has been cryogenically preserved in the hope she will one day be revived by advances in science.

Matheryn Naovaratpong, from Thailand, is thought to be the youngest person ever cryogenically preserved.

The toddler was diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer last April after she failed to wake up one morning

After being admitted to a Bangkok hospital, tests revealed she had a 11cm tumour in the left side of her brain. 

Matheryn Naovaratpong, from Thailand, is thought to be the youngest person ever cryogenically preserved Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3043272/The-girl-come-dead-Toddler-died-brain-tumour-FROZEN-parents-hope-one-day-revived-medical-advances.html#ixzz3Y8m3QVCc  Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

Matheryn Naovaratpong, from Thailand, is thought to be the youngest person ever cryogenically preserved

Doctors diagnosed her with ependymoblastoma, a rare form of brain cancer that afflicts the very young.

The outlook was bleak from the start – the disease has a five-year survival rate of 30 per cent.

To make matters worse, Matheryn – known to her family as Einz – had fallen into a coma.

After a months of intensive treatment, including 12 rounds of brain surgery, 20 chemotherapy treatments, and 20 radiation therapy sessions, it became clear there was little more doctors could do.

Tragically she died on January 8th this year after her parents switched off her life support machine.

By the time she passed away, she had lost 80 per cent of the left side of her brain – essentially paralysing the right side of her body.

But determined for some good to come from her death, her family have had her body cryogenically preserved – by one of the biggest  providers of this service in the world.

Little Matheryn is currently at the Arizona-based Alcor, her brain and body frozen separately at 196C.

Her family’s main – although many would argue, far fetched – hope is that one day, science will have progressed enough to restore life to her.

Alternatively, her parents want the cells from her brain and other parts of her body to be saved, so the disease that killed her can be studied in the future.

Alcor is also where the bodies of famous baseball player Ted Williams, as well as his son John Henry Williams, are stored.

‘It [the freezing] provides the opportunity for Matheryn to breathe again when the technology is provided and appropriate for her disease,’  said her father, who found out about the cryopreservation firm on the internet.

But as a family of doctors, they are hopeful, rather than unrealistically optimistic.

And as Matheryn’s doctor pointed out: ‘Her life was made possible by modern science in the first place – she was carried by a surrogate because her mother had lost her uterus birthing a son.’

The family also feels there are ‘still considerable frontiers left to be examined when it comes to medicine and human physiology.

‘They didn’t want their daughter’s life to end in vain,’ Aaron Drake, Alcor’s medical response director told Motherboard.

‘They’re hoping that by preserving the tissue cells of this particular cancer, they can come up with a better treatment plan, and maybe even eventually cure it. If you look at the global picture of what they’re trying to accomplish, it’s very altruistic.’

But the process of cryogenically freezing the toddler wasn’t just an emotional rollercoaster, but a logistical one, too.

In an ideal world, she would have been flown to Arizona.

But Matheryn’s health was so poor and when she ended up on a ventilator, air travel became impossible.

Instead, a doctor from Alcor flew to Thailand and, as soon as she was pronounced dead – at 6.18pm on that January evening – preservation of her body began.

Matheryn’s family said it provides peace of mind and gives them some solace from the tragedy of her death.

‘At least, we devoted her life and body for the progress and development of science,’ said her mother, Nareerat.

‘This is also another treat for our family, we know that she’s alive although we have been separated.’

Here’s what you need to know about having a (very small) second chance at life:

1. How does it work?

There are two main stages to cryonic preservation. Moments or minutes after the heart stops, circulation needs to be maintained so that the brain avoids injury through the lack of oxygen and glucose.

Thereafter, blood and water in the body is replaced with cryoprotectants before being cooled. The cryoprotectants prevent the formation of ice crystals which can cause damage to cell membranes.

The process of deep cooling without freezing is known as vitrification.

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2. How much does it cost?

The Arizona-based Alcor Life Extension Foundation charges US$80,000 to preserve the brain and about US$200,000 to keep the whole body in storage.

Quite a bit of the cost goes into the procedures and chemicals required for cryopreservation, but US$115,000 goes into a “patient care trust fund”. The funds are managed by the Patient Trust board.

The projected returns from the money is meant to cater for the customer’s eventual return, Dr Max More, Alcor’s CEO, has said in an interview with online magazine Motherboard.

The Cryonics Institute, also based in the US, says its minimum fee is US$28,000.

KrioRus, a Russian outfit, charges US$36,000 for full body preservation and US$12,000 for preserving the head, according to its website.

A common way of paying for it is through the payout from a life insurance policy.

3. How uncommon is the procedure?

The first person to be cryogenically frozen was 73-year-old psychologist James Bedford, who was suspended in 1967.

Alcor, one of the world’s largest cryonic companies, froze its first “patient” in 1976 and Matheryn was their 134th customer. There are more than 1,000 people who have signed up to be preserved by the company when they die.

The Cryonics Institute, started by math professor Robert Ettinger, has 130 “patients” currently. Dr Ettinger, who died in 2011 at age 92, was patient 106. According to its website, there are also 110 pets preserved at the Michigan facility.

Their members – living individuals who have signed up to be preserved – numbered 1,180 in March this year. There are two members from Singapore, while the majority are from the US.

The South China Morning Post reported last September that Alcor may be setting up a team in China as interest in Asia grows.

4. Is a person in “suspension” dead?

Death is not a clear-cut boundary for cryonicists and as medical technology advances, it has become an increasingly blurred line for doctors.

Alcor claims that while their patients are legally dead, they can be kept “biologically alive” with the cryonic process.

After a person’s heart stops and blood stops circulating, other parts of the body lose function when deprived of oxygen and glucose.

The brain is one of the first to sustain damage, and it can survive for up to about six minutes after the heart stops. Detached limbs can be re-attached hours or even days without blood circulation if refrigerated.

Legally, the preserved “patients” in cryonic facilities are seen as organ donations and tissue samples, but Alcor views them as “potential persons”.

Cryobiologist Dr Dayong Gao from the University of Washington, Seattle, told the BBC: “We simply don’t know if they’ve been damaged to the point where they’ve ‘died’ during vitrification because the subjects are now inside liquid nitrogen canisters.”

5. How can one bring a body back to life?

Simple tissues, small insects and embryos have been successfully preserved and brought back to life.

A rabbit kidney was vitrified and successfully transplanted in 2002, but in general, the deep-freezing of organs, much less whole mammals, is not feasible yet.

There are numerous obstacles that have to be overcome before attempting to bring back cryonically preserved persons.

Firstly, the knowledge and technology to reverse old age or cure the diseases they suffered prior to death will have to be in place.

The supercooling process is likely to have damaged their bodies. Many cryoprotectants are toxic, and their effects on the human body are unclear.

Cooling a body to -196 deg C can also make it extremely brittle, and prone to fracture.

Proponents of cryonics pin their hopes on scientific breakthroughs such as nanotechnology (the manipulation of matter at a molecular level) to repair the bodies of those preserved, or re-generate bodies for preserved brains.

Sources: Motherboard, How Stuff Works, Alcor Life Extension Foundation, BBC

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