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Hair-Raising Human Head Transplant Machine Concept Unveiled By Startup – But Is It Realistic?
IFL Science ^ | May 21, 2024 | LAURA SIMMONS

Posted on 05/23/2024 6:02:30 AM PDT by Red Badger

Are head transplants really part of the medicine of the future – and do we want them to be?

On May 21, startup BrainBridge unveiled its concept for a world-first head transplant system, promising to combine artificial intelligence with the latest in robotics to literally remove a human head and put it on a new body. If everything works as intended, once the head is in place, the person will apparently be able to get up and go about the rest of their life with a brand-new set of healthy limbs and organs. Sounds fantastical? Right now, science says it probably still is.

BrainBridge project lead Hasham Al-Ghaili, who revealed the plans for the transplant machine in a series of posts on Instagram, told Longevity.Technology, “The goal of our technology is to push the boundaries of what is possible in medical science and provide innovative solutions for those battling life-threatening conditions. Our technology promises to open doors to lifesaving treatments that were unimaginable just a few years ago.”

In its introductory video, the company claims that BrainBridge’s use of robotics will help speed the transplant process up – you can’t leave a head without a body for too long and expect it to survive. Two robots will simultaneously operate on the donor and the recipient, in an environment where the conditions can be tweaked precisely, without having to worry about making it comfortable for human medical staff.

Donor bodies would come from young, otherwise healthy people who have experienced brain death; heads from people with diseases like cancer or neurodegenerative conditions, or injuries that have led to paralysis, could then be swapped onto the younger, healthy donor body for a new lease on life.

BrainBridge says its process will preserve the recipient’s “consciousness, memories, and cognitive abilities.” It will still be you, just on a new scaffold.

They also make the bold claim that “the brain is capable of lasting several hundred years” according to their estimates, meaning that swapping out a tired body for a newer model could be the gateway to extending a human life beyond our current wildest dreams – if you take their word for it, that is.

But the big question remains: can they really do it?

Is a head transplant a realistic possibility? Many have been fascinated by the idea of transplanting a human brain or entire head. Movies from classic comedy-horror Young Frankenstein to the bang-up-to-date Poor Things have dealt with the subject, and it crops up in dozens of books – not all of them fictional. It was inevitable, really, that scientists would begin to explore the possibilities in the real world too.

One such pioneer was Robert J. White, a surgeon whose revolutionary techniques birthed a new standard in neurosurgery, but who was also perennially fascinated with what he called the “total body transplant”. White performed a number of experimental operations on monkeys. Although they could survive the initial procedure, the technology hadn’t yet caught up to enable the reattachment of all the myriad nerves in the spinal cord, so moving their new bodies was impossible.

More recently, in 2017, controversial neurosurgeon Sergio Canavero claimed to have performed a “successful” head transplant on a human – the only catch being that both humans involved in this procedure were deceased before the surgery even began. Still, Canavero was back in 2023 claiming that a living brain transplant was next on his list.

Canvero’s proposed technique has at least one commonality with BrainBridge’s futuristic surgery setup, in that they both propose to use polyethylene glycol (PEG) to re-fuse severed nerves. There’s some research to suggest that PEG could have utility in the surgical treatment of peripheral nerve injuries, but that’s a little different from successfully stitching back together an entire nervous system.

Even if we can, does that mean we should? The potential pitfalls with human head transplants don’t end there. We’ve already touched on the need for speed and keeping conditions right to stop the tissue from beginning to degenerate, and if BrainBridge is able to build a machine that works as they intend, they seem confident that they can address these issues. We’ve got robots doing surgery in space now, so having two automatons working on human bodies at the same time isn’t so farfetched, right?

But the biggest question marks hang over what might happen once a person wakes up from a head transplant. BrainBridge claims their system would keep people’s consciousness intact – but there’s still so much we’ve yet to understand about the very nature of consciousness. It’s a similar story with memory, with so many theories about how it works and no clear consensus.

Other technical questions include the possibility of immune rejection, and pain control following such a traumatic surgical procedure. And if head transplants ever did become a realistic possibility, there would be serious ethical discussions that would need to be had.

“The idea that you can just take someone’s head and just plop it on someone else’s body and it will be the same person is a theory. We take it for granted that it’s true but it’s certainly not taken for granted in other cultures or historically,” said Paul Root Wolpe, a professor of bioethics at Emory University, in a 2017 statement.

It’s not for us to say whether or not BrainBridge’s ambitious technology will ever come to fruition. Many ideas that were once thought restricted to science fiction have become a reality. But right now, a human head transplant is not a realistic possibility – and if it were, it’s not clear whether that would actually be a good thing.

"'In many ways, it's like a dozen unlikely, ridiculous claims bundled into one convenient package," neuroscientist and honorary research fellow at the Cardiff University Psychology School Dr Dean Burnett told MailOnline.

Still, it appears that Robert J. White was eerily prescient in his thinking. According to historian Brandy Shillace, author of a recent book on his life and work, White “remained convinced that the surgery would be performed, somewhere, someday, and that his work would be exonerated.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine; History; Military/Veterans
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To: Red Badger
It will be so expensive, only the super-rich can afford it................

Well my hypothetical was dealing with someone who is super rich, was it not? Would people accept it? I bet many would.

41 posted on 05/23/2024 8:13:40 AM PDT by Golden Eagle (Principles, not partisanship)
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To: Sir Bangaz Cracka

There have been lots of rumors that Jeffery Epstein and Bill Gates were using the New Mexico ranch of Epstein to seed children, or maybe even clones of themselves, using women who were being paid to be surrogates. Here’s one article I found along those lines just barely even looking again today, so there is probably a lot more out there.

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/uknews/13038513/epstein-clone-himself-mexico-victim/


42 posted on 05/23/2024 8:25:40 AM PDT by Golden Eagle (Principles, not partisanship)
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To: Red Badger
Brings to mind Dr. Francois Alcasan in the C.S. Lewis novel That Hideous Strength.
43 posted on 05/23/2024 8:40:55 AM PDT by grey_whiskers ( The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: grey_whiskers
I thought the exact same thing!

Wonder what Dr. Ben Carson thinks of this...

44 posted on 05/23/2024 9:14:27 AM PDT by spankalib
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To: Red Badger

“Donor bodies would come from young, otherwise healthy people who have experienced brain death; heads from people with diseases like cancer or neurodegenerative conditions, or injuries that have led to paralysis, could then be swapped onto the younger, healthy donor body for a new lease on life.”

Or anyone who refuses to take the mark of the beast.

Revelation 13:16-17 NKJV
He causes all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hand or on their foreheads, and that no one may buy or sell except one who has the mark or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.

Revelation 20:4-6 NKJV
And I saw thrones, and they sat on them, and judgment was committed to them. Then I saw the souls of those WHO HAD BEEN BEHEADED [emphasis added] for their witness to Jesus and for the word of God, who had not worshiped the beast or his image, and HAD NOT RECEIVED HIS MARK [emphasis added] on their foreheads or on their hands. And they lived and reigned with Christ for a thousand years. But the rest of the dead did not live again until the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he who has part in the first resurrection. Over such the second death has no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with Him a thousand years.

It would be a bad idea to steal a healthy, young Christian’s body (or parts) since it just might get reclaimed at the rapture.


45 posted on 05/23/2024 9:22:06 AM PDT by unlearner (I, Robot: I think I finally understand why Dr. Lanning created me... ;-)
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To: Red Badger

“P.S. please if you get a chanse put some flowrs on Algernons grave in the bak yard.”


46 posted on 05/23/2024 9:45:49 AM PDT by desertsolitaire (Perhaps the Great Ape Lawgiver in the series Planet of the Apes was correct in his view of humans?)
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To: Red Badger

They're going to want to do some animal research first.

47 posted on 05/23/2024 10:01:53 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Red Badger

Dr. Vladimir Demikhov created 2 headed dogs in the 50s. The grafted head was basically a zombie. (The films taken are disturbing).

I’m thinking that a head transplant would result in a zombie.


48 posted on 05/23/2024 10:02:22 AM PDT by waterhill (I Believe!)
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To: Red Badger
Simply reconnecting nerves is not enough. The missing element is training the neural network to read the sensors and drive the muscles. It takes time to develop that in a normal human. I suspect the result will be a quadriplegic with an old head and a murdered body donor with a discarded head.
49 posted on 05/23/2024 10:05:40 AM PDT by Myrddin
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To: Red Badger

Ted Williams could play for the Sawx again!


50 posted on 05/23/2024 12:38:10 PM PDT by JZelle
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To: JZelle
Ted Williams could play for the Sawx again!

"Teddy f***in' Williams knocks it out of the park! Fenway Park on its feet for Teddy f***in' Ballgame! He went yardo on that one, out to f***in' Lansdowne Street!"

51 posted on 05/23/2024 12:39:27 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Red Badger

Was it realistic when Christiaan Barnard replaced the heart in Louis Washkansky’s chest with one he’d just cut out of Denise Darvall?


52 posted on 05/23/2024 5:53:00 PM PDT by Paal Gulli
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To: Red Badger

BRAVO !


53 posted on 05/24/2024 2:56:58 AM PDT by Candor7 (Ask not for whom the Trump Trolls,He trolls for thee!),<img src="" width=500</img><a href="">tag</a>)
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