1. Patient with liver dysfunction while maintained on veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation should not be overlooked as a potential donor.
- Author
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Mourad MM, Reay M, Muiesan P, Mirza DF, and Perera MT
- Subjects
- Adult, Disease Progression, Follow-Up Studies, Graft Survival, Heart Arrest therapy, Humans, Liver Diseases surgery, Living Donors, Middle Aged, Pulmonary Fibrosis diagnosis, Pulmonary Fibrosis surgery, Respiratory Insufficiency diagnosis, Risk Assessment, Transplant Recipients, Treatment Outcome, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation methods, Liver Diseases diagnosis, Liver Transplantation methods, Respiratory Insufficiency surgery, Tissue and Organ Procurement
- Abstract
This report describes transplantation of liver allograft from a circulatory death donor who was supported by veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for 14 days and presented with severely altered liver functions. Successful liver transplant was done in a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in the background of primary sclerosing cholangitis. There was immediate graft function and uneventful recovery with stable graft function at 1-year follow-up. This case illustrates the ability of veno-venous ECMO to resuscitate organs in the presence of severe dysfunction, and perhaps, lessons from this case may be incorporated to optimize the condition of organs rescued from these marginal donors and exemplify the use of ECMO in normothermic regional perfusion in donors after circulatory death., (© 2014 Steunstichting ESOT.)
- Published
- 2014
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