Non heart-beating donors in England

Authors

  • Eleazar Chaib University of Oxford; John Radcliffe Hospital; Nuffield Department of Surgery

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322008000100020

Keywords:

Transplantation, Liver, Kidney, Donors

Abstract

When transplantation started all organs were retrieved from patients immediately after cardio-respiratory arrest, i.e. from nonheart-beating donors. After the recognition that death resulted from irreversible damage to the brainstem, organ retrieval rapidly switched to patients certified dead after brainstem testing. These heart-beating-donors have become the principal source of organs for transplantation for the last 30 years. The number of heart-beating-donors are declining and this is likely to continue, therefore cadaveric organs from non-heart-beating donor offers a large potential of resources for organ transplantation. The aim of this study is to examine clinical outcomes of non-heart-beating donors in the past 10 years in the UK as an way of decreasing pressure in the huge waiting list for organs transplantation.

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Published

2008-01-01

Issue

Section

Review

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