(Crossposted from Depressed Metabolism)
Robert J. White
is most known, or perhaps most notorious, for his work on primate head
transplants. Less known, but more relevant to the practice of human cryopreservation,
is his work in cerebral ischemia, hypothermia, and brain preservation.
Most of White's innovative work was published in the 1960s and 1970s.
White also published a substantial number of opinion pieces on a
variety of topics. One of these topics is brain death.
In an 1972 editorial for the publication Hospital Progress, "The Scientific Limitation of Brain Death," White notes that:
...we
have to acknowledge the probability that eventually all of the major
cellular complexes of the human body will be replaceable either by
transplanted organs (man or animal) or by sophisticated engineering
modules.
As a
consequence, the clinical definition of death is shifting from
cardiopulmonary criteria to the central nervous system. But unlike
other organs,
...this
system is not replicatable, representing as it does the repository of
the highest functions of man...when this elite cellular system fails it
would seem reasonable to assume that what is characteristically 'human'
is also being lost from the body.
But
just as the cardio-respiratory definition of death has evolved and
changed with the clinical practice of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, a
similar fate may be in store for the definition of brain death. The
clinical use of general anesthesia and hypothermic circulatory arrest,
in which the brain can be put "on pause," emphasize how important the
aspect of "irreversibility" is.
As presently defined, the definition of brain death puts much emphasis on brain function
upon physical examination. A major limitation of this definition is
that it categorically ignores the prospect that brain function could be
restored in the future by technologies more advanced than practiced
today, provided the material basis of brain function is preserved.
Another
challenge is that the science of cryobiology has advanced to such a
state where brain slices can be preserved at subzero temperatures and
recovered without loss of viability through vitrification.
When recovery of organized electrical activity can be demonstrated in
vitrified mammalian whole brains, the prevailing definition of brain
death will need to be challenged again because it will open the
practical possibility to maintain critically ill people in a state of
low temperature circulatory arrest without producing one of the
indicators of irreversible brain death. Such advances would be an
extension of the experiments Robert White did on isolated hypothermic
brains.
As White stresses in the final paragraph of his paper:
...like
all biological activity, life and death merge into one another
representing a continuum and the neuro-scientist can only in the final
analysis determine the point of irreversibility of this highly complex
system at which the possibility of organized activity that
characterizes human behaviour has been exceeded.