Sports Illustrated Allegations
March 4, 2004
This article discusses the misleading allegations made against Alcor by Sports
Illustrated magazine in August 2003. See also the critique of the Sports Illustrated article by the editor
of Minor
League News.
Allegations of Wrongdoing
During the month of August, 2003, a Sports Illustrated article alleging wrongdoing
by Alcor appeared on newsstands. The article alleged that a head had been separated
from a body, "shaved, drilled with holes, accidentally cracked as many as 10
times...." In the article, and especially in the media coverage that followed,
these allegations were presented as shocking news of mishandling and negligence
at Alcor.
The Facts
Alcor has been performing neuropreservation
(preservation of the brain within the head) as a cryonics procedure for decades.
Most Alcor members prefer neuropreservation, in part because it results in less
brain injury than whole body freezing. Cryonicists believe that preservation
of the brain is the most important part of cryonics. Most "patients" now in
storage at Alcor are in fact neuropreservation cases. That Alcor preserves brains
within heads is almost common knowledge. The only thing new in recent media
reports about neuropreservation at Alcor is the sensationalization of the procedure.
What about "drilled with holes?" To monitor the state of the brain during
its procedures, Alcor makes two small (1/4") holes in the skull using a standard
neurosurgical tool called a perforator. That's it. Any brain surgery patient
in any hospital will have these same holes made using the same tool to begin
a procedure called craniotomy to access the brain. One can only imagine why
Sports Illustrated chose to draw attention to such a minor procedure, and describe
it with the words it did.
What about cracking? In September,
1984, Alcor published in Cryonics magazine the first paper that documented fracturing
as a problem in large organs cooled to the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Mainstream
scientific journals (Cryobiology) have since published research suggesting that
fracturing (not breaking) is to be expected in all large organs preserved by
vitrification during cooling below -150°C. Ironically, the same week that
the Sports Illustrated story came out, Carnegie Mellon University announced
a $1.3
million grant from the federal government specifically to solve the problem
of fracturing during cryopreservation. None of this research would be going
on if the cause of fracturing were careless handling, as implied by media coverage.
Virtues Portrayed as Vices
Perhaps the most unfair aspect of the allegations against Alcor is that conscientious
and well-justified procedures were perceived as wrongdoing.
- Why does Alcor remove heads? Because, according to Alcor, that allows
the best possible preservation of the brain. The brain is the primary target
of preservation in cryonics.
- Why doesn't Alcor just remove the brain? Because the brain would
be injured in the process.
- Why does Alcor make two small holes in the skull? To properly monitor
the brain.
- Why does Alcor get "cracks"? All large organs treated with chemicals
to suppress ice formation develop invisible fractures during deep cooling.
Alcor was the first institution anywhere to discover and monitor fracturing
with a unique acoustic (sound detection) technology. Nobody would even know
about this problem were it not for Alcor's extraordinary efforts to measure
and document it during cryonics cases.
Sensational Journalism
Other articles following the Sports Illustrated story were even more extreme.
The same source cited in the Sports Illustrated story was quoted delivering
a rich variety of inflammatory invectives, including "unethical", "sickening",
"ghastly", "horrific", "desecrated", "destroyed." Surgical instruments became
woodworking tools. Cryogenic dewars, named after their inventor, James Dewar, became "gods"
named after a brand of whiskey (Florida Today, 14 Aug 2003).
Journalists continued the escalation. A former COO became a former CEO (Associated
Press, 15 Aug 2003). Two small holes became "drilled with holes" (Sports Illustrated,
18 Aug 2003). "Drilled with holes" became "cracked when holes were drilled in
it" (Arizona Capitol Times, 17 Feb 2004). Local TV stations produced graphic
animations showing a skull cracking and splitting open. (There has never been
a reported case in published scientific literature, or Alcor technical reports,
of bone ever fracturing during cryopreservation.)
Consider if a journalist did this expose of the funeral industry: "Funeral
Home Scandal: Bodies injected with poison, organs mutilated, remains stuffed
into wood boxes and covered with dirt!" It's all true, right? Of course, if
a disgruntled apprentice embalmer went to a sports magazine describing in graphic
detail the use of a trocar during embalming of a sports celebrity, or the physical
effects of cremation, he would be escorted out of the building by security.
The best proof that Alcor handles cases responsibly is that in 32 years of
Alcor history and detailed case reports, no reports can be found of anyone choosing
cryonics with Alcor ever going to reporters or authorities to complain that
they were misled by Alcor, or regretted their choice of Alcor. Even the family
members reported by media to have arranged the cryopreservation alleged by Sports
Illustrated (the two youngest children) have expressed no dissatisfaction. Only
the eldest daughter, who never wanted cryonics, has complained. Similarly, the
disgruntled ex-employee who alleged wrongdoing at Alcor has apparently disclaimed
interest in cryonics for himself (New York Times, 14 Aug 2003).
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