Yahoo – AFP,
Madeleine Coorey, 24 Oct 2014
The
revolutionary technique involves donor hearts being transferred to a portable
machine where they are placed in a preservation solution, resuscitated and kept
warm
(AFP Photo/Philippe Huguen)
|
Sydney (AFP)
- Australian surgeons said Friday they have used hearts which had stopped
beating in successful transplants, in what they said was a world first that
could change the way organs are donated.
Until now,
doctors have relied on using the still-beating hearts of donors who have been
declared brain dead, often placing the recovered organs on ice and rushing them
to their recipients.
But
Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital and the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute
have developed a technique which means hearts which had been still for 20
minutes can be resuscitated, kept beating and transplanted into a patient.
The first
heart transplants were performed
in the 1960s and used organs that had
stopped beating (AFP Photo/Brendan
Smialowski)
|
"They
are the only three in the world," surgeon Kumud Dhital, who is an
associate professor at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, told AFP.
"We
know that within a certain period of time the heart, like other organs, can be
reanimated, restarted, and only now have we been able to do it in a fashion
whereby a heart that has stopped somewhere can be retrieved by the transplant
team, put on the machine... and then (surgeons can) transplant it."
The
technique involves donor hearts being transferred to a portable machine known
as a "heart in a box" in which they were placed in a preservation
solution, resuscitated and kept warm.
All three
patients have received hearts which came from different hospitals, with the
organs kept beating during transport times of between five and eight hours.
Peter
MacDonald, medical director of the St Vincent's Heart Transplant Unit, said it
was likely that the first heart transplants ever performed in the 1960s used
organs that had stopped beating. Three more had since been done with children.
"There
have been no adult heart transplants from so-called DCD (Donated after
Circulatory Death) donors since the very first ones done in the 1960s," he
told AFP.
But in all
previous cases, the donors and recipients had been in the same hospital.
"What
we have done is developed a technique which enables us to firstly resuscitate
hearts from a DCD donor and then have a capacity to transport that heart from
the donor hospital wherever that donor hospital is ... to St Vincent's to
enable it to be transplanted," he said.
"Where
we will claim a world first is we have been able to do this in a remote
hospital and transport it to St Vincent's.
"No
one else has done that or attempted it. That's never even been contemplated
before with a DCD heart."
'You see
the heart starting to beat'
Executive
director of the Victor Chang Institute Bob Graham said it was possible to watch
the heart revive in the portable machine which involves connecting the donor
heart to a sterile circuit where it is kept beating and warm.
"Absolutely,
you see the heart starting to beat again," he told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation.
Graham said
the preservation solution used in the console allowed the heart to be more
resistant to the damage done to it when it had stopped beating and was deprived
of oxygen.
He said the
technique will mean that surgeons in Australia, where the definition of death
is brain death, will be able to do 20 to 30 percent more transplants.
"In
addition we'll be able to tell whether the heart is worth transplanting,
because we can look at the function on the console before we transplant
it," he said.
He said in
countries where the definition of death is heart death, the implications could
also be dramatic.
"This
will potentially open up heart transplantation in countries like Japan, Vietnam
and other places where the definition of death is heart death, not brain
death," he said.
Michelle
Gribilas, the first patient to receive one of the three hearts, said she was
very sick before her operation but now felt like "a different person
altogether".
The second
recipient, Jan Damen, who had the surgery about two weeks ago, said he felt
"amazing".
"I'm
not religious or spiritual but it's a wild thing to get your head around,"
he said.
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