X-Message-Number: 29497
From: "Basie" <>
Subject: Maybe your brain is better of on machine preservation initial...
Date: Mon, 7 May 2007 14:30:23 -0400

Maybe your brain is better of on machine preservation initially  until 
actual suspension.

Basie


>Machine Preservation May Promote More Organ Sharing
Science Daily - Preserving the kidneys of deceased older donors on a pump --  
as opposed to the conventional method of storing and transporting organs in 
a cooler -- may lower hospital costs, improve initial organ function, and 
promote greater use and more sharing of organs, according to new research by 
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center.

"By placing kidneys on a portable pump, preservation times can be safely 
extended to permit more time for sharing organs across the country," said 
Robert Stratta, M.D., lead researcher of the study, which is reported in the 
May issue of the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.

In addition, Stratta said, the pump can be used to project the kidney's 
initial function -- allowing for more appropriate matching of donor organs 
and recipients.

While machine preservation, or pulsatile perfusion, is not new, it is not 
widely used because it is more costly and labor-intensive. According to the 
United Network for Organ Sharing, only 21 percent of kidneys from deceased 
donors are preserved on a pump.

The purpose of this study was to compare outcomes in kidney transplant 
patients receiving kidneys from older deceased donors based on whether 
organs were preserved by pump or cold storage.

"The critical organ shortage poses a challenge to optimize the use and 
function of all organs from deceased donors," said Stratta, explaining why 
it is important to compare the two methods of preservation.

With machine preservation, donated organs are connected to a portable pump 
to maintain a constant flow of a specialized preservation solution through 
the organs until transplantation. With both methods of preservation, a 
cooling solution is pumped into the organs during organ recovery. However, 
with simple cold storage, the kidneys are simply immersed in preservation 
solution and packed on ice until transplant.

The study involved organs from "expanded criteria" donors (ECDs). This 
category was created by UNOS in 2002 so that higher risk donor organs, once 
considered unsuitable, could be transplanted safely. The category includes 
kidneys from deceased donors over age 60 years or those over age 50 with 
health conditions such as high blood pressure, stroke or elevated levels of 
a protein called creatinine. Levels of creatinine, which is produced by 
muscle, are used to determine kidney function.

The current study included 120 ECD kidney transplants -- 95 kidneys were 
preserved with machine and 25 with simple cold storage preservation 
techniques.

Despite the fact that the machine-preserved kidneys were out of the body for 
a longer period of time (a mean of 24 hours versus 19 hours for the cold 
stored organs), both groups of recipients had similar survival and 
functional outcomes. In addition, the patients receiving machine-preserved 
kidneys had a 50 percent reduction in the rates of viral infections and 
delayed graft function, which is the inability of the kidneys to start 
working on their own without dialysis.

"The routine use of machine preservation for ECD kidneys may lower hospital 
costs by reducing complications," said Stratta. "In addition, it may promote 
more sharing of organs; it is a superior means of preserving organs out of 
body and provides a way to assess the viability of the organ."

Stratta said machine preservation has played an important role in the 
Medical Center's success transplanting kidneys at the outer limits of the 
ECD acceptance criteria, such as organs donated after cardiac death, 
preserved for more than 30 hours, or from donors over age 70. In previous 
studies with up to four years of follow-up data, Stratta has shown that 
success rates with these organs are equivalent to those of conventional 
donors, in part because of appropriate donor and recipient matching through 
using the pump to assess viability and function.<

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070502153824.htm

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