Tuesday, October 22, 2019
Prolonged Preservation of the Heart Prior to Trans Essays
Prolonged Preservation of the Heart Prior to Trans Essays     Prolonged Preservation of the Heart Prior to Transplantation    Biochemistry    Prolonged Preservation of the Heart Prior to Transplantation            Picture this. A man is involved in a severe car crash in   Florida which has left him brain-dead with no hope for any   kind of recovery. The majority of his vital organs are   still functional and the man has designated that his organs   be donated to a needy person upon his untimely death.   Meanwhile, upon checking with the donor registry board, it   is discovered that the best match for receiving the heart of   the Florida man is a male in Oregon who is in desperate need   of a heart transplant. Without the transplant, the man will   most certainly die within 48 hours. The second man's   tissues match up perfectly with the brain-dead man's in   Florida. This seems like an excellent opportunity for a   heart transplant. However, a transplant is currently not a   viable option for the Oregon man since he is separated by   such a vast geographic distance from the organ. Scientists   and doctors are currently only able to keep a donor heart   viable for four hours before the tissues become irreversibly   damaged. Because of this preservation restriction, the   donor heart is ultimately given to someone whose tissues do   not match up as well, so there is a greatly increased chance   for rejection of the organ by the recipient. As far as the   man in Oregon goes, he will probably not receive a donor   heart before his own expires.        Currently, when a heart is being prepared for   transplantation, it is simply submerged in an isotonic   saline ice bath in an attempt to stop all metabolic activity   of that heart. This cold submersion technique is adequate   for only four hours. However, if the heart is perfused with   the proper media, it can remain viable for up to 24 hours.   The technique of perfusion is based on intrinsically simple   principles. What occurs is a physician carefully excises   the heart from the donor. He then accurately trims the   vessels of the heart so they can be easily attached to the   perfusion apparatus. After trimming, a cannula is inserted   into the superior vena cava. Through this cannula, the   preservation media can be pumped in.        What if this scenario were different? What if doctors were   able to preserve the donor heart and keep it viable outside   the body for up to 24 hours instead of only four hours? If   this were possible, the heart in Florida could have been   transported across the country to Oregon where the perfect   recipient waited. The biochemical composition of the   preservation media for hearts during the transplant delay is   drastically important for prolonging the viability of the   organ. If a media can be developed that could preserve the   heart for longer periods of time, many lives could be saved   as a result.        Another benefit of this increase in time is that it would   allow doctors the time to better prepare themselves for the   lengthy operation. The accidents that render people   brain-dead often occur at night or in the early morning.   Presently, as soon as a donor organ becomes available,   doctors must immediately go to work at transplanting it.   This extremely intricate and intense operation takes a long   time to complete. If the transplanting doctor is exhausted   from working a long day, the increase in duration would   allow him enough time to get some much needed rest so he can   perform the operation under the best possible circumstances.        Experiments have been conducted that studied the effects of   preserving excised hearts by adding several compounds to the   media in which the organ is being stored. The most   successful of these compounds are pyruvate and a pyruvate   containing compound known as   perfluoroperhydrophenanthrene-egg yolk phospholipid   (APE-LM). It was determined that adding pyruvate to the   media improved postpreservation cardiac function while   adding glucose had little or no effect. To test the   function of these two intermediates, rabbit hearts were   excised and preserved for an average of 24.5 1 0.2 hours on   a preservation apparatus before they were transplanted back   into a recipient rabbit. While attached to the preservation   apparatus, samples of the media output of the heart were   taken every 2 hours and were assayed for their content. If   the compound    
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