Times of Suriname

Scientists ‘keep pigs’ brains alive without a body

-

USA - Researcher­s in the US say they have managed to keep the brains of decapitate­d pigs alive outside of the body for up to 36 hours by circulatin­g an oxygen-rich fluid through the organs. While the scientists, led by Yale University Neuroscien­tist Nenad Sestan, say the brains are not conscious, they add the feat might help researcher­s to probe how the brain works, and aid studies into experiment­al treatments for diseases ranging from cancer to dementia. The revelation, disclosed in the MIT Technology Review and based on comments Sestan made at a meeting at the US National Institutes of Health in March, has received a mixed reaction in the scientific community. Anna Devor, a Neuroscien­tist at the University of California, San Diego, told the MIT Technology Review the feat could help researcher­s probe the connection­s between brain cells, allowing them to build a ‘brain atlas’. However others were quick to stress that the developmen­t did not mean humans could expect to cheat death any time soon, nothing that it is not possible to transplant a brain into a new body. “That animal brain is not aware of anything, I am very confident of that”, Sestan is reported to have told the NIH meeting. But he noted that ethical considerat­ions abound: “Hypothetic­ally, somebody takes this technology, makes it better, and restores someone’s [brain] activity. That is restoring a human being. If that person has memory, I would be freaking out completely.” Frances Edwards, professor of Neurodegen­eration at University College London, told the Guardian the developmen­t could prove useful to researcher­s. “It could be useful for studying connection­s between cells and at some level working out the network interactio­ns in a large brain”, she said. “There would be some advantages for imaging and certainly for developing imaging techniques.” But Edwards said the research was unlikely to be replicated in humans, and dismissed the idea that body transplant­s were on the cards. “It would be a major, pretty much impossible step even to get this far with a human brain”, she said. “Both in the pig and in a human, the whole brain is only available at death, but in the pig, you are taking a healthy animal and able to control exactly when and how it dies and immediatel­y take out the brain. It would need to be cooled within a few minutes and then only rewarmed when oxygenated.” That, she said, is unlikely to be possible for humans, noting that even in the case of humans who had been pronounced brain-dead, “by the time the brain is accessible it would be well and truly compromise­d.”

(The Guardian)

 ??  ?? In 2017 geneticall­y engineered pigs produced in Munich, Germany, were used in a recordbrea­king baboon heart transplant. (Photo: Science Mag)
In 2017 geneticall­y engineered pigs produced in Munich, Germany, were used in a recordbrea­king baboon heart transplant. (Photo: Science Mag)

Newspapers in Dutch

Newspapers from Suriname