Kind: captions Language: en near the hot desert just outside of Phoenix Arizona is a company called Alor despite the high temperature outside within over 100 human bodies are being preserved at very low temperatures host David po met with the president and CEO Max Moore to learn about the field of cryonics so who's in this Gallery here these are some of our patients we call them patients because we don't regard them as dead people their idea is that what we call death today is something of an arbitary line really it's today's doctors giving up and saying there's nothing more I can do for this person and I'm letting them go what we're doing is we're saying let's not quit there let's give the future a chance to bring these patients back Moore doesn't promise he'll be able to bring any of his patients back but he thinks the chances are pretty good already we're seeing the field with regenerative medicine just burgeoning uh we're already starting to replace organs and grow organ parts and I think within the next 20 years you're going to see some amazing developments so pretty much any organ in the body will be replaceable either with a biological one growing from your own tissue or perhaps a synthetic organ after an Alor member is declared legally dead the patient is immediately placed in an ice bath then the Alor team restores respiration to make sure oxygen continues to flow to the brain until the body is cryopreserved in fact certain patients choose to preserve their heads alone Ted Williams the baseball star is a famous Alor neurop patient but here's the part I don't get suppose Medical Science does advance as you hope and in 75 years they can revive this decapitated head you don't have a body anymore well this is the way I look at it I personally am a neuro member myself I'm not taking along my body my reasoning being that by the time I need this my body is going to be a disaster area so in my view if you have the technology that can repair 100 billion damage neurons replacing this part is going to be pretty easy by comparison but we leave that choice to our M so let me show you the patient care Bay patient care Bay yes this is where we have currently 117 patients the olders being Professor James Bedford whose Crow reserved back in 1967 wow oh my gosh this is very sci-fi it's not quite as sci-fi as in the movies where they always have a little Frosty face behind a glass plate can't really do that but here uh in these larger duers we have uh four whole body patients and we can also fit five neurop patients in the central colum there's there's people in those cans that's right the bodies are wrapped in a sleeping bag to protect the skin from direct exposure to liquid nitrogen each one is held in its own aluminum compartment within the can so if we could see through these we would see people just kind of like floating like this or uh you see the the aluminum pods and inside they're actually head head down so that head down yeah so that the uh head would be the last thing to be exposed so are these heavily insulated are these basically giant thermoses exactly just room temperature little bit cool to the touch y That's not inside is extremely cold - 196 c - 320 F I mean you must get some strong reactions from people you tell them what you do especially when they don't really understand it they they think there some kind of strange creepy thing where you're freezing people why would you do that but once they understand that really it's an extension of critical care medicine it's just us picking up at the point where today's medicine gives up on people it makes a lot more sense when they see patients in hospitals being taken down 10° C to slow down metabolism while you do brain surgery it starts to make sense when they look at the research into organ prior preservation the goal being to actually build an organ bank and you know keep a stock of organs rather than having to match one across the country very rapidly it starts to make sense it's certainly speculative it's certainly not guaranteed we not sure if it's going to work but it's not crazy it's a shock it gives you a chance and as for Max Moore you would live forever I don't use the word forever because forever a very long time uh there may be the heat death of the universe some might explode in a few billion years who knows but indefinite lifespan I'm talking about really changing death from being compulsory to making it an option so you check back with me in a thousand years and ask me if I've had enough till then more will be at Alor well at least his head will