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Journal Article

Citation

Fujisaki N, Nakao A, Osako T, Nishimura T, Yamada T, Kohama K, Sakata H, Ishikawa-Aoyama M, Kotani J. Med. Gas Res. 2014; 4: 13.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency, Disaster and Critical Care Medicine, Hyogo College of Medicine, Nishinomiya, Hyogo, Japan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/2045-9912-4-13

PMID

25097755

PMCID

PMC4121619

Abstract

The increasing demand for organ allografts to treat end-stage organ failure has driven changes in traditional donor criteria. Patients who have succumbed to carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning, a common cause of toxicological mortality, are usually rejected as organ donors. To fulfill the increasing demand, selection criteria must be expanded to include CO-poisoned donors. However, the use of allografts exposed to high CO concentrations is still under debate. Basic research and literature review data suggest that patients with brain death caused by CO poisoning should be considered appropriate organ donors. Accepting organs from CO-poisoned victims could increase the number of potential donors and lower the death rate of patients on the waiting lists. This review and reported cases may increase awareness among emergency department physicians, as well as transplant teams, that patients dying of CO exposure may be acceptable organ donors.


Language: en

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