Can a person wake up after being frozen for 30 years and does the memory still exist after waking up? Please guys 3Q

You're a curious kid, what a tease. This is for you, take a good look. We often hear about the resurrection of "vegetative" people, and the most amazing resurrection of a "vegetative" person took place in the suburb of Kislovodsk, a city in the southern part of the former Soviet Union, where a "vegetative" person who had been in a coma for 38 years was revived. The most amazing case of "vegetable" revival occurred in the southern city of Kislovodsk in the former Soviet Union, where a "vegetable" who had been asleep for 38 years miraculously awoke and then suddenly died 21 days later. This incident caused great concern to the medical profession of the former Soviet Union. The "vegetable" was Nina Panina Ribenova. In 1953, when she was 24 years old, she cried out when she heard the news of Stalin's death, and then fainted at night, and then remained in a coma and a "vegetable" for four years in the hospital. After 4 years in the hospital, her mother took her home to take care of her. During the 38 years she was in a coma, her appearance remained the same as when she was young. On New Year's Day this year, her 85-year-old mother passed away, and her body was placed next to the bed where she was lying for her friends and relatives to pay their respects. At that moment, a miracle happened: Nina rolled over, then tears came to her eyes, and finally she stood up and joined her friends and relatives in burying her mother. After Nina woke up and returned to her normal life, she gave interviews to journalists and chatted with people, remembering vividly the events of 38 years ago. She says it seems like yesterday. Twelve days after Nina's awakening, another strange thing happened, she suddenly changed from a girl to an old, wrinkled woman. By the 21st day after her awakening, Nina suddenly died, leaving behind an unsolved mystery. Modern medical research has proved that people in a low-temperature state, can be intact preservation of body tissues. Some surgeons in Lyon, France, used the latest surgical techniques to bring back to life a woman's "corpse" that had been frozen for 30 years. Helen Chaparral was 26 years old when doctors discovered a lesion in her heart, but the state of the art in surgery at the time did not allow for an effective cure, so the doctors decided to put her in deep freezing until the state of the art in surgery could be improved and then thawed her out and revived her. Helen was placed in a tube filled with dry ice and kept breathing with an artificial respirator until the last second. When her body temperature drops to near zero, her blood is drained and she is given an intravenous infusion of glycerin and a water-based solution. Her body is then wrapped in foil and placed in a coffin-shaped cylinder containing liquid nitrogen at a temperature as low as minus 320 degrees Fahrenheit. Once this was done, Helen's frozen body was moved to a cold room in the hospital. 30 years later, doctors decided that Helen's heart condition could be cured by modern surgery and decided to bring her back to life. Doctors warmed the frozen blood drawn from Helen's body, infused it into her frozen body, and used electric shock absorbers to stimulate her heart and brain. After a while, the doctors detect a small heartbeat and are so happy that they rush to repair her heart. Two days later, she woke up and opened her eyes to see her parents 30 years older, but she was still as beautiful as ever. Not surprisingly, nature's naturally low temperatures can also create "frozen" people. In 1986 a team of mountaineers climbed the Alps, and when they passed a glacier, they found a body lying in the ice. The body was dressed as a French soldier and looked as if it had been asleep. The men could not help shouting in amazement. Captain Abini thought the body was strange and immediately sent a report to the local museum. The museum immediately organized manpower and equipment, went to the glacier, carefully cut the ice around the body. Since the body was too fresh, they did not dare to put it in the museum, and sent him to the Marseille Medical Institute, the director of Dr. Shiwei did not dare to be negligent, and immediately set up a medical team, and formulated a strict thawing procedures. After the doctors carefully and cautiously thawed, after a few days, the miracle appeared: the body of the corpse was slightly shaking, and then, his eyes, face also wriggled, not long, he opened his eyes, looking around in amazement. The doctors, suppressing their excitement, immediately gave him an arterial injection, and in a short time he made a "gurgling" sound in his throat. Doctors were busy to help him sit up, he said the first words: "I, where am I? Under the care of the doctors, he began to speak and move normally, and told the story of his life. His name was Philippe, he was a soldier of the French infantry regiment, who fought in the high mountains of Italy and France during the First World War (1914-1918). He was 22 years old. During a hasty march, he fell into a thick snowdrift and was soon covered with ice. By the time he's counted, he's been sleeping in the ice for 69 years, and his actual age is over 90. But he still weighs, moves and looks like a 22-year-old. On examination, Philippe's wife and son have passed away. His grandchildren are now in their 40s and 50s, and his great-grandchildren are married and have children, and he's younger than his great-grandchildren, a family relationship that makes him laugh. The most amazing thing is that people who have been frozen for 1,000 years can come back to life. Not long ago, while drilling a glacier on Greenland, scientists found the bodies of a couple and two children in a collapsed igloo. Their dark, stubby, and obese physical features suggest that this was an Eskimo family that had been trapped in the igloo by one of the violent snowstorms common in the area, and thus the bodies were well preserved. The family is shipped to Copenhagen in containers equipped with supercooling equipment. There, scientists put them on respirators, slowly raise their body temperatures, and use electric shocks to stimulate their central nervous system in order to perform what seems like an impossible miracle - to bring people back to life who have been dead for 1,000 years. When the boy's eyelashes begin to flutter, the scientists gasp with nervousness and amazement. 4 bodies are still asleep, but all show signs of life activity. The scientists gently nudge them awake. The resurrected Eskimos, terrified of the strange environment and strangers, crawled into a corner and huddled together. 1000 years have passed and the language has changed so much that it is impossible to talk in Eskimo. In order to gradually eliminate their fear, they were placed in a specially modeled Eskimo hut and given fresh fish and blubber every day. Therefore, although scientists from all over the world are eager to find out what happened, further research will have to wait until these 1,000-year-olds are familiarized with modern man.

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