2015 Annual Meeting Elections

OFFICERS
President: Max More was re-relected unanimously.
CFO/treasurer: Michael Perry was re-relected unanimously.
Secretary: Michael Perry was re-relected unanimously.

DIRECTORS
Each director on the existing Board of Directors was relected unanimously:
Catherine Baldwin
James Clement
Ravin Jain
Saul Kent
Ralph Merkle
Michael Riskin
Brian Wowk

California Magazine does article about Alcor

California Magazine, published by the UC Berkeley Alumni Association, does a nice article about Alcor. The subheading is “The first man to be cryonically preserved was Berkeley psychologist James Bedford. Half a century later, he’s still on ice.”

Into the Deep Freeze: What Kind of Person Chooses to Get Cryonically Preserved?

A-2019 becomes Alcor’s 139th patient on June 28, 2015

Private Alcor member A-2019 was pronounced clinically dead on June 28, 2015 in St. Louis, MO. A-2019, a neurocryopreservation member, was Alcor’s 139th patient and arrived at Alcor on July 2, where cool down from dry ice temperature to liquid nitrogen temperature commenced.

In mid-May, Alcor received a call from one of our members in the St Louis, MO area. He informed us that he had previously been diagnosed with lung cancer but had decided to forgo conventional treatments for more natural-based therapies that he self-prescribed. He had also chosen against diagnostic imaging to monitor his progress so he was unable to obtain any feedback on the progression of his disease.

His phone call was prompted by a concern over the possible spread of his disease. He recently coughed up blood and his limbs and joints were becoming increasingly painful.

We urged him to seek immediate medical attention as these were signs that could be quite serious, especially if related to his cancer. He sounded quite reluctant to go to a hospital or emergency facility out of fear they would attempt to treat his cancer. We explained that a diagnosis and prognosis of his current condition would help Alcor determine the extent of his illness and provide valuable information in the event a standby was warranted. He could always decline any cancer related treatment they offered but awareness of the medical problem was important. The member stated he would take our suggestions under advisement and keep us posted (we later learned he had decided not to be evaluated).

Less than two weeks later, we received a call very early in the morning, from the member’s best friend, telling us that our member was being taken to the hospital by ambulance due to severe difficulty breathing. Within the hour, the friend called back to say that our member had arrested in the emergency department and was pronounced after 40 minutes of unsuccessful resuscitation efforts.

We were successful in convincing the hospital to administer Heparin, in accordance with the patient’s medical alert tag and flushing with 500ml of sodium chloride, in lieu of chest compressions which they refused to perform post-pronouncement. Ice packs were also placed around the patient and he was transferred to the hospital’s morgue coolers. A local mortuary was found who agreed to assist with transport and the use of their prep room.

Due to the late notice and limited time available to acquire the paperwork needed for transport, Alcor president Max More decided to authorize the use of our Field-Neuro perfusion procedure rather than settling for a straight-freeze. Steve Graber and Aaron Drake flew to St. Louis, arriving the same evening, and drove to the mortuary where the patient was stored in their cooler, covered with ice bags.

Working through the night, the Field Neuro perfusion system was setup, surgical access was obtained and a washout/perfusion was performed using a smoothed step-ramp approach. A concentration of 50.1 Brix was achieved and maintained for an additional 30 minutes before termination, which concluded around 7:00 am in the morning. Dry ice was acquired through a tissue bank facility that was open all night and was used immediately to cool the body. After a brief rest, Aaron and Steve returned to the mortuary to construct a dry-ice shipping container and reapply additional dry ice to replenish that which had evaporated.

A commercial flight was scheduled for later in the week, after they were certain the patient was down to dry ice temperature. Our local mortuary retrieved the shipment from airline cargo and delivered to Alcor, following the direct flight to Phoenix. The dry ice shipper had plenty of dry ice remaining and our temperature monitor indicated that the patient was still sufficiently cold. His body is now in queue for further cooling measures.

On June 28th, 2015, A-2019 became Alcor’s 139th patient. He is also our 6th patient of the calendar year, and 15th patient for the last 12 months.

Alcor Northern California Meeting

Northern California Meeting and Potluck on July 19th at 4:00 p.m.

Hosted by: Prem Cervenka
Address: 3181 Surmont Dr.
Lafayette, CA 94549
Phone: 925-932-3790

Take the driveway through the gate to the top of the hill. There’s plenty of parking there.
We have a pool, so bring swim suits if you’d like.
Some appetizers will be provided but feel free to bring food to share.

Mark is offering to carpool from the South and East Bay if there is space.
Mark’s phone: 650-969-1671

Looking forward to seeing everyone!

Membership Numbers Update, May 31, 2015

Membership Numbers
Members with cryopreservation arrangements = 1,037
Associate Members = 157
Patients = 138
Total membership = 1,332

Patients
Neurocryopreservation = 86
Whole Body Cryopreservation = 47
Neuro with Whole Body = 5

Mariette Selkovitch becomes Alcor’s 136th patient on May 5, 2015

Mariette Selkovitch, Alcor member A-2830, was pronounced clinically dead on Tuesday May 5, 2015 at 1:30 am in California. Mrs. Selkovitch, a neurocryopreservation member, became Alcor’s 136th patient later the same day.

Around 1:16am on Tuesday May 5, 2015, we received an alert from Ronald Selkovitch, a 21-year member of Alcor. His wife, Mariette, had gone into cardiac arrest and resuscitation was being attempted. There was no membership paperwork for her and no funding arranged but he was insisting that we come for her. Normally, the absence of prior arrangements would rule out Alcor accepting such a case. However, on checking our records, some important details emerged. Something similar happened in 2008, when Mr. Selkovitch’s 101-year old mother died, also without having any membership paperwork signed or funding arranged. Nevertheless, we accepted the case. Mr. Selkovitch followed through as promised and paid for her. His mother is still our oldest patient at time of clinical death, just short of 102 years old.

Medical Response Director, Aaron Drake, contacted Suspended Animation to put them on the alert. However, SA’s Suspension Services manager said that (especially given that any team would likely arrive post-mortem) SA would not deploy without complete paperwork and agreement from the board and from Alcor’s Chief Medical Advisor, Dr. Steven Harris. I called and was able to consult with a majority of directors in the middle of the night and secure agreement from everyone, along with Dr. Harris, but the shortage of time meant that it would be impossible to fulfill the conditions for SA and so Alcor deployed a team directly.

It must be stressed that the decision could easily have gone the other way, and in just about any other circumstance, would have. As it was, due to this being a third-party signup (by a member), Mr. Selkovitch was faced with the standard third-party fee (the primary purpose of which is to compensate for family and legal risks). He said he would gladly cover this if we would accept his wife’s case.

We were fortunate in that the sheriff said that no autopsy was needed and she would be released immediately to a mortuary (the same one where his mother was taken in 2008). The one living son of Mr. and Mrs. Selkovitch was on his way and Mr. Selkovitch said he was on the way there and would very likely sign the Relative’s Affidavit (which he did). Mr. Selkovitch was diligent in that he filled out the membership paperwork that I gave Aaron to take with him. Funding followed very rapidly.

The Alcor team set out for California at 5:21 am and were able to administer and circulate medications while packing the head in ice. The team returned to Alcor with Mrs. Selkovitch at 7:38 pm. Cryoprotective perfusion was ended at 12:13 am on May 6 and cool down immediately initiated.

–Max More

Dr. Laurence Pilgeram becomes Alcor’s 135th patient on April 15, 2015

Laurence Pilgeram, Alcor member A-1245, was pronounced clinically dead on Friday April 10, 2015 in Santa Barbara, California at the age of 90. Alcor was notified on Monday April 13 and Dr. Pilgeram, a neurocryopreservation member, became Alcor’s 135th patient on April 15, 2015.

Dr. Laurence Pilgeram, a cryopreservation member of Alcor since 1991, was involved in cryonics early on. He gave a talk at the 1971 Cryonics Conference in San Francisco, California, on “Abnormal in-Vitro Oxidation and Lypogenesis Induced by Plasma in Patients with Thrombosis”. Dr. Pilgeram was awarded his PhD. in Biochemistry at the University of California at Berkeley in 1953. In 1954-55 he served as an Instructor in Physiology at the University of Illinois College of Medicine in Chicago. After two years, he accepted an offer to develop and head an Arteriosclerosis Research Laboratory at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine. He later moved to Santa Barbara, California for a time before joining the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX to develop and head the Coagulation Laboratory there.

On April 10, Dr. Pilgeram, collapsed outside of his home of an apparent sudden cardiac arrest. Despite medical and police personnel aware of his Alcor bracelet, he was taken to the medical examiner’s office in Santa Barbara, as they did not understand Alcor’s process and assumed that the circumstances surrounding his death would pre-empt any possible donation directives. Since this all transpired late on a Friday evening, Alcor was not notified of the incident until the following Monday morning.

Fortunately, no autopsy was performed which at least eliminated any invasive damage but the lengthy delay led to a straight freeze as the only remaining option. The medical examiner released the body to the mortuary that Alcor uses in Buena Park, California and he was immediately covered with dry ice, per our request. Aaron Drake and Steve Graber traveled to California to perform a neuro separation in the mortuary’s prep room and then returned to Arizona for continued cool down which began on April 15, 2015.

Pilgeram