This will end up being important if the details of these systems are important for encoding the differences between humans rather than just important for having a properly functioning brain. If it's just important for proper functioning, we can just figure it out once and then assume that the brain you're reconstructing has these systems in good working order. If it's important for encoding the differences between humans then we'd have to preserve these systems to preserve "you".
I'm reminded of Charles Stross on space colonization, where he talks about how it's a bit too late to realize you forgot the (insert essential mineral here) supplement when your interstellar generation ship starts coming down with the purple polkadot scurvy at 0.001c and boosting. There's a reason we can't reliably provision a generation ship, and it's that we have never yet tried to completely and permanently sever ourselves from Earth's ecology and biosphere. We may think we've got it all covered, but if there's a leak in the cycles somewhere, or somethi...
Comments? If superior brain preservation can be demonstrated under a 5nm-resolution 3D scan, plastination wins over vitrification hands-down. Is Robin missing anything here, or is this indeed as important as he says?