Case Report Demonstrating the Safe and Effective Means of Expanding the Donor Pool With Livers Recovered From Brain-Dead Donors After Ethylene Glycol Toxicity

Abstract The growing disparity between organ supply and demand has become the greatest hurdle facing transplant professionals and life-saving transplants. Because the organ shortage has become the rate-limiting step to effective transplants, it is critical for the transplant community to identify vi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Transplantation proceedings 2016-11, Vol.48 (9), p.3064-3066
Hauptverfasser: Fujii, M.H, Gierlach, J, Alami, S, Ericksen, C, Kashyap, R, Orloff, M.S, Marroquin, C.E
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container_end_page 3066
container_issue 9
container_start_page 3064
container_title Transplantation proceedings
container_volume 48
creator Fujii, M.H
Gierlach, J
Alami, S
Ericksen, C
Kashyap, R
Orloff, M.S
Marroquin, C.E
description Abstract The growing disparity between organ supply and demand has become the greatest hurdle facing transplant professionals and life-saving transplants. Because the organ shortage has become the rate-limiting step to effective transplants, it is critical for the transplant community to identify viable mechanisms to expand the donor pool and use every available allograft. Although using kidneys from deceased donors whose demise was secondary to ethylene glycol (EG) toxicity requires great deliberation and precise timing as described by Barbas et al [5] , using hepatic allografts in this setting involves far less risk. The following is a discussion of a 61-year-old male who was diagnosed with end-stage liver disease secondary to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and ultimately underwent a life-saving transplant with a liver recovered from a donor with EG-induced brain death and allocated nationally due to trepidation by local and regional centers to use the liver from a donor after EG toxicity.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.transproceed.2016.04.003
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
Brain Death
End Stage Liver Disease - surgery
Ethylene Glycol - poisoning
Humans
Liver Transplantation - methods
Male
Middle Aged
Suicide
Surgery
Tissue and Organ Procurement - methods
Tissue Donors - supply & distribution
Transplantation, Homologous - methods
Transplants - physiology
title Case Report Demonstrating the Safe and Effective Means of Expanding the Donor Pool With Livers Recovered From Brain-Dead Donors After Ethylene Glycol Toxicity
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