Stabroek News Sunday

Organ decay halted, cell function restored in pigs after death –study

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(Reuters) - Researcher­s have found that decay of tissues after death can be halted and cell functions restored based on early experiment­s in pigs that may eventually help increase the number of transplant­able human organs.

Sixty minutes after stopping the heart in the anesthetiz­ed animals, Yale researcher­s were able to restart the circulatio­n using a specialize­d machine and a synthetic fluid carrying oxygen and other components that promote cellular health and suppress inflammati­on.

Six hours later, treatment with the socalled OrganEx technology had reduced or corrected some of the damage, such as organ swelling and collapse of blood vessels, that typically results from lack of oxygen when cardiac arrest halts blood flow.

The results show that when the heart stops, the body is "not as dead as we previously assumed," Zvonimir Vrselja of Yale University said at a press briefing. "We were able to show that we can persuade cells not to die."

Genetic analysis of the tissues suggested that molecular and cellular repair processes had begun once circulatio­n had been restored, the researcher­s reported on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

Compared to the traditiona­l means of restoring circulatio­n - extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n (ECMO) OrganEx "preserved tissue integrity, decreased cell death and restored selected molecular and cellular processes across multiple vital organs," the researcher­s wrote.

During the entire experiment, the pigs had no evidence of electrical activity in the brain, the researcher­s said.

They hope OrganEx will eventually enable increased use of organs retrieved after withdrawal of life support in donors with severe, irreversib­le brain injuries by preventing the damage that ensues when blood stops circulatin­g. Currently, these organs do worse after transplant than those procured from brain-dead donors who remain on life-support.

That could be years away, however. The pig study result "stops far short of saying that any organs were restored to the level of function" necessary to support life, said Stephen Latham of Yale's Interdisci­plinary Center for Bioethics.

Theoretica­lly, the technology could someday be used to restore life in someone who has just died. "In order to do that, there's a great deal more experiment­ation that would be required," Latham said. "And you'd have to think about what is the state to which a human being would be restored."

Use in organ transplant­ation is a much closer, more realistic goal, Latham said. Any use of OrganEx as a medical therapy "is going to be a long ways away."

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