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Why aren’t brain transplants possible?

At the Alcor facility in Arizona, more than 150 disembodied heads reportedly lie in cryogenic chambers, preserved in hopes that future medical advances can bring these brains back to life in new bodies. Given that scientists still cannot revive a cryogenically preserved brain, why do patients bother with cryonics at all? Why couldn’t these heads just be stitched onto new bodies in the present day, when they’re still fresh? In other words, why isn’t a brain transplant possible?

Dr. Max Krucoff, an assistant professor of neurosurgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin, would rather describe such a procedure as a body transplant. Unlike a patient who receives a donor heart or liver, transplanting a brain into a patient’s body would make them “a completely new human being,” he told Live Science. “Your agency, your identity, is contained within your brain.”

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