Publications by authors named "M P Briones Godino"

The self-assessment tool (SAT) of hospital management in donation and transplantation is a systematic instrument that allows reaching a situation status on Procurement and Transplantation with emphasis on the management and cultural change of Health Personnel in each care center. The SAT allows reflection on institutionalization, achievements, and the cultural change generated by donation and transplantation in Health Personnel. It also allows the evaluation of the culture of hospital donation and the formulation of plans and goals for the future.

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The detection of brain death (BD) plays a fundamental role in the management of hospital donation. Delayed diagnosis of BD is the main cause of donor loss. A tool for monitoring and prognosis in the neurocritical patient is essential to meet these objectives.

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The ischemic and primary vascular injury of the brainstem (BS) can determine, among other serious conditions, the brain death (BD) of the individual. We present 2 cases of individuals with primary ischemic vascular disease of the BS who evolved to BD and were donors of solid organs and tissues. In both cases, the clinical examination was positive for the diagnosis of BD, and transcranial Doppler did not confirm the pattern of cerebral circulatory arrest that accompanies BD.

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Hypernatremia and the state of plasma hypertonia are part of the alterations of insipid diabetes that are integrated to the brain death (BD) syndrome. Hypernatremia should be corrected as early as possible to make the clinical diagnosis of BD and to avoid its potential deleterious effect on the subsequent operation of the liver graft. Transcranial Doppler is a very valuable tool for the diagnosis of cerebral circulatory arrest associated with BD.

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The conversion rate has emerged as a good indicator of the effectiveness of the transplantation process by showing the percentage of potential donors who become real donors, but it overestimates the number of organs that are actually used for transplantation in recipients. The incorporation of organ use rate, a new quality indicator that reflects the actual number of organs used for transplantation excluding those that are discarded in the surgical block, provides complementary information of great value when comparing transplantation in different regions. This new variable allows more accurate prediction of the waiting time for the transplantation of a certain organ in patients with nonreversible organic insufficiencies, while providing the national authorities a real response in relation to the percentage of the demand for organs that can be satisfied.

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