Isolated brain
An isolated brain is a brain kept alive in vitro, either by perfusion or by a blood substitute, often an oxygenated solution of various salts, or by submerging the brain in oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid. It is the biological counterpart of brain in a vat. A related concept, attaching the brain or head to the circulatory system of another organism, is called a brain transplant or a head transplant. An isolated brain, however, is more typically attached to an artificial perfusion device rather than a biological body.
The brains of many different organisms have been kept alive in vitro for hours, or in some cases days. The central nervous system of invertebrate animals is often easily maintained as they need less oxygen and to a larger extent get their oxygen from CSF; for this reason their brains are more easily maintained without perfusion. Mammalian brains, on the other hand, have a much lesser degree of survival without perfusion and an artificial blood perfusate is usually used.
For methodological reasons, most research on isolated mammalian brains has been done with guinea pigs. These animals have a significantly larger basilar artery compared to rats and mice, which make cannulation much easier.
History
- 1812 – César Julien Jean Legallois put forth the original idea for resuscitating severed heads through the use of blood transfusion.
- 1818 – Mary Shelley published Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus.
- 1836 – Astley Cooper showed in rabbits that compression of the carotid and vertebral arteries leads to death of an animal; such deaths can be prevented if the circulation of oxygenated blood to the brain is rapidly restored.
- 1857 – Charles Brown-Sequard decapitated a dog, waited ten minutes, attached four rubber tubes to the arterial trunks of the head, and injected blood containing oxygen by means of a syringe. Two or three minutes later, voluntary movements of the eyes and muscles of the muzzle resumed. After cessation of oxygenated blood transfusion, movements stopped.
- 1884 – Jean Baptiste Vincent Laborde made what appears to be first recorded attempt to revive the heads of executed criminals by connecting the carotid artery of the severed human head to the carotid artery of a large dog. According to Laborde's account, in isolated experiments a partial restoration of brain function was attained.
- 1912 – Corneille Heymans maintained life in an isolated dog's head by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein of the severed head to the carotid artery and jugular vein of another dog. Partial functioning in the severed head was maintained for a few hours.
- 1928 – Sergey Bryukhonenko showed that life could be maintained in the severed head of a dog by connecting the carotid artery and jugular vein to an artificial circulation machine.
- 1963 – Robert J. White isolated the brain from one monkey and attached it to the circulatory system of another animal.
- 1993 – Rodolfo Llinás captured the whole brain of a guinea pig in a fluidic profusion system in vitro which survived for around 8 hours and indicates that field potentials were similar to those described in vivo.
- 2023 – In a study focused on maintaining pig brain function, a group of researchers from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center succeeded in an experiment related to brain isolation in vivo, researchers developed an extracorporeal pulsatile circulatory control system. This system allowed for the independent regulation of cerebral hemodynamics, distinct from the body's systemic circulation. By surgically altering blood flow to the pig's head and employing a computer algorithm, the experiment aimed to replicate natural blood pressure, flow, and pulsatility. Results showed that under EPCC, brain activity, cerebral oxygenation, pressure, temperature, and microscopic structure remained largely unchanged or minimally perturbed for several hours, as compared to the normal circulation state. This outcome highlights the feasibility of studying neural activity and its circulatory manipulation in isolation from the rest of the organism.
In philosophy
The inherently philosophical idea has also become a staple of many science fiction stories, with many such stories involving a mad scientist who might remove a person's brain from the body, suspend it in a vat of life-sustaining liquid, and connect its neurons by wires to a supercomputer which would provide it with electrical impulses identical to those the brain normally receives. According to such science fiction stories, the computer would then be simulating a virtual reality and the person with the "disembodied" brain would continue to have perfectly normal conscious experiences without these being related to objects or events in the real world.
No such procedure in humans has ever been reported by a research paper in a scholarly journal, or other reliable source. Also, the ability to send external electric signals to the brain of a sort that the brain can interpret, and the ability to communicate thoughts or perceptions to any external entity by wire is well beyond current technology.
Grown
In 2004 Thomas DeMarse and Karl Dockendorf made an "adaptive flight control with living neuronal networks on microelectrode arrays".Teams at the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Reading have created neurological entities integrated with a robot body. The brain receives input from sensors on the robot body and the resultant output from the brain provides the robot's only motor signals.
In fiction
The concept of a brain in a jar is a common theme in science fiction.Literature
- Louis Ulbach's story "Le Prince Bonifacio" features scenes about a disembodied brain.
- In Dick Donovan's story "Some Experiments with a Head", the head of a guillotined man is reanimated by electricity.
- In Carl Grunert's story "Mr. Vivacius Style", the severed head of a journalist is revived in a laboratory.
- In Raymond Roussel's novel Locus Solus, the tissues of Georges Danton's head reproduce the speeches he had uttered before his execution.
- In E. F. Benson' story "And the Dead Spake...", the brain of a housekeeper is connected to a gramophone.
- An isolated brain gets psychic powers in the short story "The Brain in the Jar", by Norman Elwood Hammerstrom and Richard F. Searight.
- In Alexander Beliaev's novel Professor Dowell's Head, Professor Dowell discovers a way of keeping heads of dead people alive and even to give them new bodies. After his death Dowell himself becomes a subject of such an experiment.
- In Guy Dent's novel Emperor of the If, an isolated brain have a power of create alternate realities.
- The Mi-go aliens in the Cthulhu Mythos of H. P. Lovecraft, first appearing in the story "The Whisperer in Darkness", can transport humans from Earth to Pluto and back again by removing the subject's brain and placing it into a "brain cylinder", which can be attached to external devices to allow it to see, hear, and speak.
- In Edmond Hamilton's Captain Future novels series, the character Prof. Simon Wright is a human brain living in a transparent case.
- In Donovan's Brain, the 1942 science fiction novel by Curt Siodmak, the brain of a ruthless millionaire is kept alive in a tank where it grows to monstrous proportions and powers.
- The final novel in C.S. Lewis's "Space Trilogy", That Hideous Strength, uses the isolated brain of Francois Alcasan, an Algerian radiologist guillotined for murder, as a plot device. At some point in the novel, it is revealed that Alcasan's artificially-perfused head is used to allow evil intelligence to communicate with humans directly.
- In Roald Dahl's short story "William and Mary", after William's death his brain is kept alive on an artificial heart.
- In Madeleine L'Engle's novel A Wrinkle in Time, the character IT is a disembodied telepathic brain that dominates the planet of Camazotz.
- In Cordwainer Smith's short novel The Boy Who Bought Old Earth, the protagonist Rod McBan is "scunned": his head is pickled, his body dehydrated and freeze-dried, and all reconstituted at his destination, for transit via interstellar economy class.
- In Frank Herbert's novel Destination Void, a spaceship is controlled by disembodied human brain called an Organic Mental Core.
- The Ruinators, later known as the Demiurges, are the immensely cyborgized alien society in Humans as Gods, the 1966–1977 sci-fi trilogy by Sergey Snegov. They use the isolated brains of the highly intelligent species Galaxians as the organic supercomputers in charge of the Metrics Stations, the primary and most secret military defense structure of the Ruinators' Empire. The brains are being extracted from the prisoners' babies and grown artificially in the spheres filled with the nutrient liquid. Among the most important characters of the second and third novels comes the Brain of the Third Planet, later known as Vagrant or Voice, who has somehow developed self-consciousness and later rebelled against the Ruinators. Due to the Vagrant's fervent desire for a life of those embodied, the Brain has been surgically put into a dragon's body, whose inherent brain was destroyed in a recent battle. Vagrant enjoyed a sentient dragon's life for a few decades after that, until the body grew too senile, and on the threshold of the dragon's death the brain was removed again to assume control over a starship.
- In the novel Gray Matters by William Hjortsberg, the protagonist and his acquaintances are all disembodied brains, preserved underground after a nuclear war.
- In P. C. Jersild's novel A Living Soul, a human brain is living in an aquarium, and is a subject of medical experiments
- In Legends of Dune, a prequel trilogy to the novel Dune, cymeks are disembodied brains that wear robotic bodies.