Suspended animation coming to life: researcher

While hydrogen sulfide is toxic in large doses, small amounts of the gas have the potential to make animals appear dead
Lab mice. A gas proven deadly in chemical weapons could one day be used to put people into life-saving suspended animation. While hydrogen sulfide is toxic in large doses, small amounts of the gas have the potential to make animals appear dead for a while then allow them to wake up unharmed, according to biochemist Mark Roth. "We did it with a mouse; this was cosmic," Roth said.

A gas proven deadly in chemical weapons could one day be used to put people into life-saving suspended animation.

While hydrogen sulfide is toxic in large doses, small amounts of the gas have the potential to make animals appear dead for a while then allow them to wake up unharmed, according to biochemist Mark Roth.

"I think we are on the path of understanding metabolic flexibility in a significant way," said Roth, whose work at an eponymous lab in Washington State has gotten funding from a research arm of the US Department of Defense.

"In the future an emergency medical technician might give hydrogen sulfide to someone suffering serious injuries and they might become a little more immortal giving them time to get the care they need."

Suspended animation takes place in the natural kingdom, with bears hibernating through winters while plant seeds and bacterial spores are able to biologically sleep for millions of years, according to the researcher.

It has also long been fodder for .

"Usually when I mention suspended animation people will flash me the Vulcan peace sign," Roth said while explaining his research at a the ended here Saturday.

Roth found that in bonds in spots in bodies that would usually be occupied by oxygen, ostensibly becoming a sort of dimmer switch for .

"We did it with a mouse; this was cosmic," Roth said. "We found a way to do this with a mammal. All you had to do was put it in room temperature and it was no worse for the wear."

Roth's lab has completed early phase human trials but hasn't actually tried the process in a person.

"We should know in a few years if it works or not," Roth said. "You want to plant a flag and people will come and then think about how to use it in other ways."

(c) 2010 AFP

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