Freedman, B. I., et al. «Apolipoprotein L1 gene variants
in deceased organ donors are associated with renal allograft failure.»
«Mild hypothermia
in deceased organ donors improves organ function in kidney transplant: Finding could increase overall organ availability.»
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.
Not exact matches
Some states have,
in addition, passed laws requiring medical personnel to ask the family of the
deceased to donate his or her
organs.
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.
In this study, researchers utilized national data on inpatient deaths in the United States to estimate the potential supply of deceased organ donors, and used these data, in combination with State Inpatient Databases (SIDs) to develop new metrics of OPO performance that better reflect the true deceased donor supply in each geographic are
In this study, researchers utilized national data on inpatient deaths
in the United States to estimate the potential supply of deceased organ donors, and used these data, in combination with State Inpatient Databases (SIDs) to develop new metrics of OPO performance that better reflect the true deceased donor supply in each geographic are
in the United States to estimate the potential supply of
deceased organ donors, and used these data,
in combination with State Inpatient Databases (SIDs) to develop new metrics of OPO performance that better reflect the true deceased donor supply in each geographic are
in combination with State Inpatient Databases (SIDs) to develop new metrics of OPO performance that better reflect the true
deceased donor supply
in each geographic are
in each geographic area.
Slight changes to the system for allocating
deceased - donor kidneys could result
in higher rates of
organ procurement and lead to more kidney transplants across the country, according to new research co-authored by an Indiana University Kelley School of Business professor.
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.
The researchers note that these data alone do not capture all potential
deceased organ donors
in the U.S., as the current definition of an eligible death excludes potential donors over age 70, and those classified as a «donation after cardiac death» donor, both of which broaden the pool of available donors.
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.
These observations support testing for APOL1 renal - risk variants
in deceased African American kidney donors to improve the
organ allocation process.
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 purpos
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 purpos
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.
The Cleveland Clinic said
in a statement that the uterus came from a
deceased organ donor.
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
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.