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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2004;26:144-150
© 2004 Elsevier Science NL
a Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, Friedrich-Schiller University, Bachstrasse 18, 07740 Jena, Germany
b Department of Electron Microscopy, University of Göttingen, Germany
c Clinical Research Group Chronic Airway Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine (Respiratory Medicine), Philipps-University Marburg, Marburg, Germany
Received 5 November 2003; received in revised form 19 January 2004; accepted 20 January 2004.
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +49-3641-934-801; fax: +49-3641-934-802
e-mail: th.wittwer-md{at}t-online.de
Objective: Lung transplantation is limited by scarcity of donor organs. Lung retrieval from non-heart-beating donors (NHBD) might have the potential to extend the donor pool and has been reported recently. However, no studies in NHBD exist using the novel approach of retrograde preservation with Perfadex solution. Methods: Asystolic heparinized pigs (n=5/group) were continuously ventilated for 90, 180 or 300 min of warm ischemia. Lungs were then retrogradely preserved with Perfadex and stored at 4 °C in inflation. After 3 h of additional cold ischemia, left lung transplantation was performed. Hemodynamics, pO2/FiO2 and dynamic compliance were monitored for 5 h. Intrapulmonary lung water was determined by both global wet-to-dry lung weight ratio (W/D ratio) and standard stereological examination of relative volume fractions of intraalveolar edema. All results were compared to sham-operated controls and to lungs obtained from standard heart-beating donors after retrograde preservation with Perfadex and 27 h of cold ischemia. Statistics comprised ANOVA analysis with repeated measures and MannWhitney tests. Results: No mortality was observed. During flush preservation of NHBD lungs, continuous elimination of blood clots via the pulmonary artery was observed. Oxygenation, compliance, intraalveolar edema fraction and W/D ratio were comparable between groups, whereas PVR was significantly lower in sham-controls. Conclusions: Use of NHBD lungs is feasible and results in similar postischemic outcome when compared to sham-controls and standard preservation procedures even after 5 h of pre-harvest warm ischemia. Especially, the NHBD with high-risk constellations for intravascular coagulation might benefit from retrograde preservation by elimination of thrombi from the pulmonary circulation. This innovative technique might also be considered in situations, where brain-dead organ donors become hemodynamically unstable prior to onset of organ harvest. Further trials with longer warm and cold ischemic periods are initiated to further elucidate this promising approach of donor pool expansion.
Key Words: Retrograde pulmonoplegia Non-heart-beating donors Perfadex lung preservation Lung transplantation
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