• The discovery raised hopes for a range of future medical uses in humans, the most immediate being that it could help organs last longer, potentially saving the lives of thousands of people worldwide in need of transplants.
  • The technique could potentially also be used to resuscitate people. However this could increase the risk of bringing back patients to a point where they are unable to live without life support — trapped on what is called the "bridge to nowhere", Brendan Parent, a bioethicist at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine, said in a linked comment in Nature.
  • Benjamin Curtis, a philosopher focused on ethics at the U.K.'s Nottingham Trent University, said the definition of death may need updating because it hinges on the concept of irreversibility.