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Home > Non-heart beating donation


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1 Introduction

Prior to the introduction of brain-stem death into law in the mid to late 1970s, all organ transplants from cadaveric donors came from non-heart beating donors (NHBD).

Brain-stem dead donors, however, lead to better results as the organs were perfused with oxygenated blood until the point of perfusion and cooling at organ retrieval, and so non-heart beating donors were generally no longer used except in Japan, where brain-stem death was not legally (until very recently) or culturally (still) recognised.

However, a growing discrepancy between demand for organs and their availability from brain-stem dead donors has lead to a re-examination of using non-heart beating donors, and many centres are now using such donors to expand their potential pool of organs.

Tissue donation ( corneas, heart valves, skin, bone) has always been possible for non-heart beating donors, and many centres now have established programmes for kidney transplants from such donors. A few centres have also moved into NHBD liver and lung transplants. Many lessons have been learnt since the 1970s, and results from current NHBD transplants are comparable to transplants from brain-stem dead donors.

2 Maastricht classification

NHBDs are grouped by the Maastricht classification (1995; amended 2003)


I Brought in dead
II Unsuccessful resuscitation
III Awaiting cardiac arrest
IV Cardiac arrest after brain-stem death
V Cardiac arrest in a hospital inpatient (new category, 2003)


Categories I and II are termed uncontrolled and categories III to V are controlled. Only tissues can be taken from category I donors. Category II donors are patients who have had a witnessed cardiac arrest outside hospital, have cardiopulmonary resusciation by trained paramedics commenced within 10 minutes but who cannot be successfully resuscitated. Category III donors are patients on intensive care units with non-survivable injuries who have treatment withdrawn; where such patients wished in life to be organ donors, the transplant team can attend at the time of treatment withdrawal and retrieve organs after cardiac arrest has occurred.

3 Organs that can be used

Kidneys can be used from category II donors, and all organs except the heart can potentially be used from category III, IV and V donors. An unsuccessful kidney recipient can remain on dialysis, unlike recipients of some other ogans.

Kidneys from uncontrolled (category II) donors must be assessed with care as there is otherwise a high rate of failure. Many centres have protocols for formal viability assessment. Relatively few centres worldwide retrieve such kidneys, and leaders in this field include the transplant units in Maastricht (the Netherlands), Newcastle upon Tyne and LeicesterThis article discusses Leicester in England. For other places of the name see Leicester (disambiguation). Leicester (pronounced Lester is a city in the English Midlands, on the River Soar. It is the traditional county town of Leicestershire (the administr ( United KingdomThe United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a state in Western Europe, usually known simply as the United Kingdom the UK Britain or less accurately as Great Britain . The UK was formed by a series of Acts of Union which united the formerly), MadridThis article is about the Spanish capital. For other entries, see Madrid (disambiguation). Coat of arms Madrid the capital of Spain, is located in the center of the country at 40°25'N, 3°45'W. As of 2003 census, population of the city of Madrid proper was ( SpainThe Kingdom of Spain is a country located in the southwest of Europe. It shares the Iberian Peninsula with Portugal, Gibraltar and Andorra. To the northeast, along the Pyrenees mountain range, it borders France and the tiny principality of Andorra. It inc), and Washington, DCWashington, DC officially the District of Columbia (also known as DC Washington and, historically, the Federal City is the capital city and administrative district of the United States of America. Residents of the city and its surrounding suburbs refer to.

Liver and lung transplants can only be taken from controlled donors, and are still somewhat experimental as they have only been performed successfully in relatively few centres. In the United KingdomThe United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a state in Western Europe, usually known simply as the United Kingdom the UK Britain or less accurately as Great Britain . The UK was formed by a series of Acts of Union which united the formerly, NHBD liver transplants are currently only performed in Newcastle upon Tyne, LeedsThis article discusses the city Leeds in West Yorkshire, England. Leeds gives its name to the metropolitan borough named the City of Leeds, discussed in a separate article, which also takes in many towns and villages in the surrounding area. Leeds is a ci and King's College HospitalKing's College Hospital first opened in 1840 close to Lincoln's Inn Fields and within two years was treating 1290 inpatients in 120 beds. In 1913 King's moved to its present building and site at Denmark Hill. It had taken an Act of Parliament nine years e London.



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