Scientists revive brain function in dead pigs

Singapore News News

Scientists revive brain function in dead pigs
Singapore Latest News,Singapore Headlines
  • 📰 YahooNews
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 49 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 23%
  • Publisher: 59%

Scientists have managed to restore cell function in the brains of pigs hours after they died, in a breakthrough Wednesday that experts said threw into question the very notion of what makes animals -- or even humans -- alive.

Authors of the US-based study said their research could one day be used to help treat victims of heart attacks and strokes and unravel the mysteries of brain trauma.

The team from the NIH BRAIN initiative, a federally funded US research programme, used the brains of 32 pigs that had been slaughtered for food and discarded, without blood or glucose flow, for four hours each. "I was tremendously surprised," Nenad Sestan, a researcher at Yale University and lead study author told AFP.

The team stressed that they saw no"higher level functional activity" such as electric signalling associated with consciousness in the revived brains. "If some activity shows up that indicated consciousness, we would have to stop the experiment," said Stephen Latham, from Yale's Centre of Bioethics.The findings suggest that scientists may have underappreciated the brain's capacity for self-restoration after a patient is declared brain dead.

She said researchers had inadvertently created an ethical grey area where the pigs used were"not alive, but not completely dead."

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

YahooNews /  🏆 380. in US

Singapore Latest News, Singapore Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Scientists restore some brain cell functions in pigs four hours after deathScientists restore some brain cell functions in pigs four hours after death'Huge breakthrough' could lead to clinical treatments of brain damage but also raises ethical concerns and creepy scenarios.
Read more »

Scientists Restore Some Brain Function After Death in Animal ExperimentsScientists Restore Some Brain Function After Death in Animal ExperimentsResearchers have found a way to restore some activity to pig brains hours after death, in a series of experiments that medical and legal experts said could reshape science’s understanding of the brain’s limits.
Read more »

Yale study revives cellular activity in pig brains hours after deathYale study revives cellular activity in pig brains hours after deathYale University scientists have succeeded in restoring basic cellular activity i...
Read more »

Brains from slaughtered pigs are partly revived hours after deathBrains from slaughtered pigs are partly revived hours after deathScientists restored some activity within the brains of pigs that had been slaughtered hours before, raising hopes for some medical advances and questions about the definition of death.
Read more »

In radical experiment, scientists restore activity in pigs' brains hours after slaughterIn radical experiment, scientists restore activity in pigs' brains hours after slaughterScientists restore brain circulation and some cell activity in pigs' brains hours after the animals died in a slaughterhouse. - NBCNewsMACH
Read more »

Scientists spur some activity in brains of slaughtered pigsScientists spur some activity in brains of slaughtered pigsResearchers managed to restore partial cell function in the brains of pigs 10 hours after they were killed, a breakthrough that experts say throws into question the very definition of death.
Read more »

A dead pig's brain was brought back to life, sort ofA dead pig's brain was brought back to life, sort ofDid they really bring a dead pig's brain back to life? Scientists say that they restored 'circulation and cellular activity' in a pig's brain four hours after its death.
Read more »

Brain waves for angry dreams discovered by sleep scientistsBrain waves for angry dreams discovered by sleep scientistsAnger in dreams appears to have the same brain patterns as anger during wakefulness.
Read more »

Chinese scientists defend implanting human gene into monkeys' brainsChinese scientists defend implanting human gene into monkeys' brainsA Chinese researcher who sparked improved cognitive function in monkeys by implanting human genes into their brains has defended his experiment, which has divided the scientific community.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-04-18 01:59:20