Increasing shortage of donor organs leads to the acceptance of less than optimal grafts for transplantation, up to and including organs donated after circulatory standstill of the donor. Therefore, protective strategies and pharmacological interventions destined to reduce ischemia induced tissue injury are considered a worthwhile focus of research. The present study evaluates the potential of a multidrug pharmacological approach as single flush at the end of static preservation to protect the liver from reperfusion injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Kidney transplantation suffers from a shortage of donor organs. Despite this, a lot of grafts are discarded due to inadequate quality. As many kidneys are afflicted by transient filtration failure early after preservation, classical renal function tests are not applicable to differentiate between prospective recovery or continuing deficit of renal function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Gradual warming up of cold stored organ grafts using a controlled machine perfusion protocol facilitates restitution of cellular homeostasis and mitigates rewarming injury by adapted increase of temperature and metabolism. The aim of the present study was to compare intra- and extracellular type perfusion media for the use in machine perfusion-assisted rewarming from hypo- to normothermia.
Methods: Rat livers were retrieved 20 min after cardiac arrest.
Objectives: The benefit of machine perfusion during storage of liver grafts retrieved after cardiac death should be investigated as applied either at the beginning or near the end of the preservation period.
Methods: Rat livers were explanted 20 min after cardiac arrest of the donor and cold-stored (CS) for 18 h. Other grafts were additionally subjected to 2 h of normothermic machine perfusion (MP) either 3 h after retrieval (early MP) or 3 h before reperfusion (late MP), thus extending total ischemic time to 20 h.
Background: The successful implementation of end-ischemic normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) into clinical practice comes along with unusual demands for trained personnel and technical facilities in the implantation clinic. This creates an interest to bundle expertise and professional equipment for execution of MP at regional pump centers at the disadvantage of adding a second short period of cold preservation while sending the reconditioned grafts to the actual implant clinic. Differences of liver recovery upon reperfusion either immediately after NMP or after 3 h of cold storage subsequent to NMP should therefore be evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of erythrocytes and oxygen concentration on kidneys during long-term normothermic kidney perfusion is under debate. This study compares acellular and erythrocyte-based NMP with focus on oxygen delivery to the tissue as well as the effects of high oxygenation on tissue integrity. Pig kidneys were connected to NMP for six hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbrupt return to normothermia has been shown a genuine factor contributing to graft dysfunction after transplantation. This study tested the concept to mitigate reperfusion injury of liver grafts by gentle warming-up using ex vivo machine perfusion prior to reperfusion. In a single center randomized controlled study, livers were assigned to conventional static cold storage (SCS) alone or to SCS followed by 90 min of ex vivo machine perfusion including controlled oxygenated rewarming (COR) by gentle and protracted elevation of the perfusate temperature from 10°C to 20°C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Warm reperfusion after previous cold storage has been shown to have a negative impact on mitochondrial function of organ grafts. Here, we wanted to investigate whether a more controlled warming up of the cold graft by ex vivo machine perfusion with gradually elevated temperature from cold to normothermia (including comparison of two warming up protocols) prior to implantation would be effective in preventing mitochondrial dysfunction upon reperfusion.
Methods: All experiments were conducted on porcine kidneys retrieved 15 min after cardiac arrest.
Background: Sudden restoration of normothermic conditions upon reperfusion of cold-stored grafts has been suggested to entail a massive energy demand not yet met by the cells that still suffer from hypothermic torpor. An adapted and gentle rise of graft temperature by ex-vivo machine perfusion has, therefore, been proposed. This should now be tested in the clinical setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Machine perfusion was found an effective tool to recover organ grafts from ischemic insults during preservation. It could be observed that organ integrity is significantly affected by abrupt temperature shifts during hypothermic storage and implantation periods. Studies showed that a gentle and controlled rise of the temperature during oxygenated machine perfusion prior to implantation can protect the tissue from reperfusion injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Normothermic machine perfusion (NMP) provides a promising strategy for preservation and conditioning of marginal organ grafts. However, at present, high logistic effort limits normothermic renal perfusion to a short, postponed machine perfusion at site of the recipient transplant center. Thus, organ preservation during transportation still takes place under hypothermic conditions, leading to significantly reduced efficacy of NMP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrgan shortage and the increasing use of extended criteria donor grafts for transplantation drives efforts for more efficient organ preservation strategies from simple cold storage toward dynamic organ reconditioning. The choice of a suitable preservation solution is of high relevance in different organ preservation or reconditioning situations. Custodiol-MP is a new machine perfusion solution giving the opportunity to add colloids according to organ requirements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe possible reno-protective effect of a controlled brief heat-shock treatment during isolated ex vivo machine perfusion of donor grafts prior to reperfusion should be investigated in a primary in vitro study. Porcine kidneys (n = 14) were retrieved after 20 minutes of cardiac standstill of the donor and subjected to 20 hours of static cold storage in University of Wisconsin solution. Prior to reperfusion, kidneys were subjected to 2 hours of reconditioning machine perfusion with gradual increase in perfusion temperature up to 35°C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Controlled oxygenated rewarming (COR) has been shown to be a feasible and safe method in clinical practice and to reduce peak serum transaminases after liver transplantation. This study aimed to demonstrate further clinical experience of this method of now 18 clinical liver transplantations utilizing COR and demonstrate the long-term results.
Methods: In this extended series of 18 patients, cold-stored livers were subjected to machine-assisted slow COR for ≈120 minutes before transplantation.
Here we evaluate the potential of anterograde gaseous oxygen persufflation for graft reconditioning after extended storage times. Pig livers were retrieved and cold-stored in HTK solution for 16 h. Some grafts were subsequently subjected to anterograde gaseous oxygen persufflation via the portal vein for 2 h.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPretransplant machine perfusion of donor grafts has gained clinical appreciation to improve graft function and survival after transplantation. This study was aimed as pilot investigation to evaluate the additive potential of a transient ex vivo heat shock treatment of the isolated organ during machine perfusion to further protect the graft from subsequent reperfusion injury. Rat livers were retrieved after 20 min of cardiac arrest and preserved for 18 h by cold storage in HTK solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCold preservation sensitizes organ grafts to exacerbation of tissue injury upon reperfusion. This reperfusion injury is not fully explained by the mere re-introduction of oxygen but rather is pertinent to the immediate rise in metabolic turnover associated with the abrupt restoration of normothermia. Here we report the first clinical case of gradual resumption of graft temperature upon ex vivo machine perfusion from hypothermia up to normothermic conditions using cell-free buffer as a perfusate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrgan dysfunction pertinent to tissue injury related to ischemic ex vivo preservation during transport from donor to recipient still represents a pivotal impediment in transplantation medicine. Cold storage under anoxic conditions minimizes metabolic activity, but eventually cannot prevent energetic depletion and impairment of cellular signal homeostasis. Reoxygenation of anoxically injured tissue may trigger additional damage to the graft, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShort term normothermic reconditioning by machine perfusion after cold storage has shown beneficial effects in renal transplantation models. Systematic investigations concerning the inclusion of washed erythrocytes as oxygen carriers are lacking in this context. Porcine kidneys were subjected to 20 h of static cold storage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEx vivo machine perfusion of the liver after cold storage has found to be most effective if combined with controlled oxygenated rewarming up to (sub)-normothermia. On disconnection of the warm graft from the machine, most surgeons usually perform a cold flush of the organ as protection against the second warm ischemia incurred upon implantation. Experimental evidence, however, is lacking and protective effect of deep hypothermia has been challenged for limited periods of liver ischemia in other models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNormothermic machine perfusion can decrease reperfusion injury in renal transplantation. Clinical procurement logistics include retrieval and initial transport of the graft using static cold storage. Therefore, use and benefits of brief normothermic reconditioning by machine perfusion should be investigated in the initially cold preserved graft.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although organ shortage is a rising problem, organs from hepatitis C virus (HCV) ribonucleic acid (RNA)-positive donors are not routinely transplanted in HCV-negative individuals. Because HCV only infects hepatocytes, other organs such as kidneys are merely contaminated with HCV via the blood. In this study, we established a protocol to reduce HCV virions during the cold ischemic time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe concept of "controlled oxygenated rewarming" (COR) using ex vivo machine perfusion after cold storage was evaluated as tool to improve renal graft function after transplantation. Renal function after 20 min warm ischemia and 21 h cold storage was studied in an auto-transplant model in pigs (25-30 kg, n = 6 per group). In the study group, preimplant ex vivo machine perfusion for 90 min was added after cold storage, including gentle warming up of the graft to 20°C (COR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin the scope of transplantation research, ex vivo kidney perfusion has been proven an attractive model to study ischemia-reperfusion and preservation injury. Renal perfusion techniques also occupy scientists with the aim to optimize organ reconditioning and preparation prior to transplantation. This study investigated the influence of a pulsatile perfusion pattern that brings flow conditions closer to physiological situations, on renal perfusion characteristic and kidney function in the isolated perfused kidney.
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