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Donor prone positioning protects lungs from injury during warm ischemia

Authors :
Manyin Chen
C. Summers
L. Caldarone
Aadil Ali
T. Kanou
Shaf Keshavjee
Khaled Ramadan
Mingyao Liu
Yu Zhang
M. Galasso
R. Qaqish
Marcelo Cypel
M. Pipkin
Harley Chan
Thomas K. Waddell
Yohei Taniguchi
Y. Watanabe
D. Nakajima
Tatsuaki Watanabe
Lorenzo Del Sorbo
Source :
American Journal of Transplantation. 19:2746-2755
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

A large proportion of controlled donation after circulatory death (cDCD) donor lungs are declined because cardiac arrest does not occur within a suitable time after the withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy. Improved strategies to preserve lungs after asystole may allow the recovery team to arrive after death actually occurs and enable the recovery of lungs from more cDCD donors. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of donor positioning on the quality of lung preservation after cardiac arrest in a cDCD model. Cardiac arrest was induced by withdrawal of ventilation under anesthesia in pigs. After asystole, animals were divided into 2 groups based on body positioning (supine or prone). All animals were subjected to 3 hours of warm ischemia. After the observation period, donor lungs were explanted and preserved at 4°C for 6 hours, followed by 6 hours of physiologic and biological lung assessment under normothermic ex vivo lung perfusion. Donor lungs from the prone group displayed significantly greater quality as reflected by better function during ex vivo lung perfusion, less edema formation, less cell death, and decreased inflammation compared with the supine group. A simple maneuver of donor prone positioning after cardiac arrest significantly improves lung graft preservation and function.

Details

ISSN :
16006135
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3a4f81d22eea645320a37101bf53cca