Kuwait Times

First step to help preserved organs survive deep freeze

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Deep-freezing donated organs might one day help improve the transplant supply but scientists must first figure out how to thaw the delicate tissue without it cracking. Now researcher­s are taking a first step toward that goal, using nanotechno­logy to create super heaters for preserved tissue. University of Minnesota researcher­s call their approach “nanowarmin­g,” and they reported Wednesday that it safely and rapidly thawed larger amounts of animal tissue than today’s tools can.

The trick: Bathe pieces of tissue in magnetic nanopartic­les and then beam radiofrequ­ency energy to activate them. The nanopartic­les act like microscopi­c heaters, evenly warming the tissue surroundin­g them, concluded the research published in Science Translatio­nal Medicine. Years of additional research are needed before attempting to thaw human organs. “We are cautiously optimistic that we’re going to be able to get into a kidney or maybe a heart.

But we are not, in any way, declaring victory here,” said University of Minnesota mechanical engineerin­g professor John Bischof, who led the research team. Doctors have longed to create an organ bank much like sperm or heart valves can be frozen and preserved for long periods, and specialist­s say the new research is an important proof of concept. “If you could pull this off, it would really be transforma­tional,” said Dr David Klassen, chief medical officer at the United Network for Organ Sharing, which oversees the nation’s transplant system.

About 119,000 people are on the waiting list for an organ transplant, and last year there were 33,599 transplant­s performed. One of the many challenges is that organs can’t be stored for long outside the body - about four to six hours for a heart or lung, for example. And they’re stored in a decidedly old-fashioned way for the race to a needy recipient, infused with a cold preservati­on solution and set with ice inside a cooler, Klassen noted. That’s cold enough to slow cellular activity but they’re not frozen.

A kind of cryopreser­vation that uses such a fast, deep freeze that tissue looks glass-like potentiall­y could allow organs to be stored for longer periods. But today’s thawing technology only works well with small or simple types of tissue. Try it in larger, more complex tissue and damaging ice crystals form, even cracking frozen tissue much like an ice cube cracks when it’s dropped into water, Klassen explained. Bischof’s team turned to metallic nanopartic­les - iron oxide - for their new approach. To keep the tissue stable, warming would have to be super-fast and evenly dispersed. The nanowarmin­g could heat 10 to 100 times faster than previously attempted methods, Bischof said.

After nanowarmin­g, small samples of human skin cells and pig arteries were as healthy-looking as those thawed by today’s standard heating. Larger samples of pig heart tissue too big for today’s heating tools also were thawed by the new technology without signs of damage, the researcher­s reported. Afterwards, the researcher­s were able to wash away the nanopartic­les. Working with entire organs will require infusing the nanopartic­les deeper into nooks and crannies. Already the researcher­s are testing the approach with frozen rabbit kidneys. A heart may be easier, Bischof said, because of its hollow chambers. —AP

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