ZME Science on MSN
Mouse brain tissues recover key activity after deep freeze, but cryonics remains far off
A team in Germany has shown that mouse brain tissue can regain measurable signs of activity after being preserved in a glass-like state at extremely low temperatures and then thawed. The work marks a ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists restore activity in mouse brain tissue after deep freezing
A team of researchers in Germany has frozen adult mouse brain tissue at cryogenic temperatures and, after thawing it, ...
Slices of mouse brain that were kept at -150°C for up to a week have shown near-normal electrical activity after being warmed up. The results could take us a step closer towards cooling and reviving ...
A mouse brain slice (5 days old, 300 μm thick) was cleared with SeeDB-Live. The medium was exchanged from artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) to SeeDB-Live/ACSF, and within one hour of immersion, ...
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