Sentences with phrase «from deceased organ»

The Cleveland Clinic said in a statement that the uterus came from a deceased organ donor.
(That has been a challenge for efforts to treat type 1 diabetes with received transplants of β cells from deceased organ donors.)
Eventually a corneal transplant — most often from a deceased organ donor — is necessary.

Not exact matches

At Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Transplant Center, the wait for an organ from a deceased donor can be years, but «with this strategy you can get an offer within weeks,» she says.
By passively cooling deceased organ donor body temperature by approximately two degrees from normal body temperature, researchers saw an overall nearly 40 percent increase in the successful function of donated kidneys after surgery.
«Liver transplant patients who receive organs from living donors more likely to survive than those who receive organs from deceased donors.»
Wondering what was behind those reports, McAninch and colleagues at Rush previously obtained and analyzed brain tissue from the University of Miami Brain Bank from deceased Caucasian male organ donors who at their time of death were young and healthy, without known thyroid problems, to see if they could find any clues.
And in another Penn project, researchers are studying the potential benefits for some patients to accept kidney transplants from deceased diabetic donors, rather than remaining on the organ transplant list for a «lower risk» transplant.
Prins took human prostate stem cells from deceased young adult male organ donors and implanted the cells into mice, where they formed human prostate tissue.
UC San Diego Health surgeons perform the region's first kidney transplants with organs from a deceased person.
Domino liver transplant procedures are aptly named for the sequential, one - after - the - other nature of the process in which a viable liver from a deceased donor is transplanted into the first recipient, and the first recipientâ $ ™ s organ is then transplanted into a second recipient.
A transplanted organ from a deceased donor typically needs weeks to «heal» and reduce the risk of rejection.
Samples will come from approximately 160 deceased donors identified through autopsy or organ and tissue transplant programs.
Nearly 20 percent of kidneys that are recovered from deceased donors in the U.S. are refused for transplant due to factors ranging from scarring in small blood vessels of the kidney's filtering units to the organ going too long without blood or oxygen.
In the case of the eight patients in the study, Collinge said that it's likely they acquired a-beta amyloid seeds from the hormone harvested from the deceased elderly who donated their organs for that purpose.
Whether the removal and / or retention and / or disposal of tissue, whole organs or parts of organs from the bodies of deceased persons following hospital or coronial post-mortem confers any cause of action upon the Claimants and which do not form part of the Royal Liverpool Children's Litigation.
Whether the retention by the Defendant and / or their predecessors in title of tissue, parts of organs from the bodies of stillborn or deceased children after post-mortem confers any cause of action for psychiatric trauma suffered by the parents of those children caused by the discovery of that retention
Furthermore, paired kidney transplants using organs from deceased or live donors, makes compelling sense from a cost perspective, compared to the alternative of the pain and discomfort of kidney dialysis treatment.
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