5 results match your criteria: "Kyoto University Hospital Transplantation Unit[Affiliation]"

Background: Current success of islet transplantation has led to donor shortage and the need for marginal donor utilization to alleviate this shortage. The goal of this study was to improve the efficacy of islet transplantation using nonheartbeating donors (NHBDs).

Methods: First, we used porcine pancreata for the implementation of several strategies and applied to human pancreata.

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Pancreatic islet cell transplantation using non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs).

J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg

December 2005

Kyoto University Hospital Transplantation Unit, 54 Kawara-cho, Shogoin, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, 606-8507, Japan.

Recent dramatic improvements in clinical islet cell transplantation demonstrated by the Edmonton group have increased the demand for this treatment, and donor shortage could become a major problem. Utilization of marginal donors could alleviate the donor shortage, and non-heart-beating donors (NHBDs) might be good resources. The University of Pennsylvania group demonstrated that it was possible to isolate islets from NHBDs, and the group actually transplanted islets from NHBDs, for the first time.

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Rising demand for islet transplantation will lead to severe donor shortage in the near future, especially in countries where cadaveric organ donation is scarce. We undertook a successful transplantation of living-donor islets for unstable diabetes. The recipient was a 27-year-old woman who had had brittle, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus for 12 years.

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A comparative evaluation of culture conditions for short-term maintenance (<24 hr) of human islets isolated using the Edmonton protocol.

Cell Tissue Bank

January 2003

Puget Sound Blood Center/Northwest Tissue Center, 921 Terry Ave, Seattle, WA 98104, USA; Division of Transplantation, Department of Surgery, University of Washington Medical Center, 1959 N.E. Pacific Street, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Current address: Kyoto University Hospital Transplantation Unit, 54 Shogoin Kawara-cho Sakyo-ku Kyoto 606-8507 Japan(e-mail: phone: 81-75-751-4324; fax: 81-75-751-4348))

Once human islets are isolated, they are typically transplanted into type 1 diabetic recipients within 2 h of isolation. This time restriction makes it difficult for patients to travel from distant locations to receive an islet transplant and it also makes it difficult to complete pre-release quality control assessments (i.e.

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