DutchNews.nl, February 13,
2015
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| Photo: MIGroningen |
The UMCG is the
first hospital in the country to use the new system which may allow a 10% to
20% increase in donations, the broadcaster said. The hospital has been equipped
with a special room where human organs such as livers, kidneys and lungs can be
kept for transplantation under the best possible conditions.
The organs are
being connected to special machines – described by Nos as being like a heard
and lung machine – to keep the organ functioning. This will help repair damage
to the organs themselves by, for example, allowing doctors to remove excess
moisture from the organs.
‘Transplants are possible because we keep the organs
on ice,’ surgeon Robert Porte told Radio 1 news. ‘That means they die more
slowly and an organ needs little oxygen. But this is not ideal.’
The new
system, he says, gives the organ the feeling it is still in a human body
because ‘it is provided with oxygen and food and a flow of blood.’ Organs kept
using this method are better accepted by the recipient.
The new method also
means more organs can be used. Currently organs from people with diabetes or
who are considered too old are not considered suitable. ‘From now on we can say
that we will try to get the organs in the best possible condition outside the
body,’ Porte said.

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