Not exact matches
I think this is an example of,
when science is on our side, particularly, well I think either way, if it's living or
deceased, I, yeah, because I remember the article about the woman in Sweden and I want to say, the
donor was maybe in her 60's.
Mild hypothermia in
deceased organ
donors significantly reduces delayed graft function in kidney transplant recipients
when compared to normal body temperature, according to UC San Francisco researchers and collaborators, a finding that could lead to an increase in the availability of kidneys for transplant.
Penn Medicine researchers found that living
donor transplant outcomes are superior to those found with
deceased donors with appropriate
donor selection and
when surgeries are performed at an experienced center.
The first few weeks after the transplant are critical, especially
when the organ
donor is
deceased, said Jordan Pober, the Bayer Professor of Translational Medicine and professor of immunobiology, pathology, and dermatology at Yale.
The risk of rejection is even higher
when the
donor is
deceased, due to organ damage.
The NPRM's proposed approach did not differentiate between situations in which the
donor was competent to consent to the donation — for example,
when an individual is donating blood, sperm, a kidney, or a liver or lung lobe — and situations in which the
donor was
deceased, for example,
when cadaveric organs and tissues were being donated.