In Germany, this first European start-up wants to get up the dead

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Tomorrow Biostasis is a Berlin start-up developing human cryopreservation so that future medical innovation may restore people and treat
their underlying reason for death.The young business already declares a lots frozen guinea pigs and a waiting list as long as the arm
When technological advances permit, it guarantees to provide them life extension
They would be hundreds on the waiting list
Thats what German start-up Tomorrow Biostasis is declaring, guaranteeing to be able to reanimate the dead.A dozen bodies are already stored
in a cryopreservation laboratory-- a story deserving of a sci-fi film, as the extremely major American magazine Popular Mechanics
tells.Emil Kendziorra, the co-founder of the start-up, is working hard to present the first company in the sector in Europe.According to
Popular Mechanics, there are currently a couple of in the United States, like The Alcor Life Extension Foundation and The Cryonics
Institute.The goal of Tomorrow Biostasis is to intervene as quickly as possible after the death of an individual to protect the body and/or
the brain of this individual in a state of tension, a form of profound sleep throughout which the important functions are slowed down to a
minimum.Then, when technological advances allow, Tomorrow Biostasis will deal with and reverse the initial reason for the persons death
and bring them back from the dead to enjoy a prolonged life
At least thats the plan, the press reporter laughs.ENSURING THE PROPER PRESERVATION OF BODIESAccording to Emil Kendziorra, the common
client is 36 years of ages and works (unsurprisingly) in the tech sector, the publication ironizes.Some want to protect their brains,
believing that their future self may prefer a brand-new 3D-printed body ..
or possibly nobody at all.Unlike traditional startups, Tomorrow Biostasis deals with 2 interconnected companies: The Tomorrow Patient
Foundation (TBF) is a Swiss non-profit private advantage organization that is the legal guardian of the cryopreserved patient.As well as
being a research body, the European Biostasis Foundation supplies the facility for long-lasting look after patients in Rafz,
Switzerland.Upon arrival, clients are cooled to -196 degrees celsius and positioned in dewars filled with liquid nitrogen to keep
cryopreservation.To make it legal, the process is technically considered a present to science
Of course, waiting for medical advances to reverse the cause of your death is not the only barrier to this concept.Theres still that little
but considerable issue: no one knows how to restore a person who has been cryopreserved, puts Popular Mechanics into perspective.Although
cell and tissue preservation is already practiced, no one has succeeded in bringing a departed individual back to life with standard
functions and memories.Another question remains unanswered: who will make the decision, and when, to get up the guinea pig?
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