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Journal Article

Citation

Waller JA, Haisch CE, Skelly JM, Goldberg CG. Transplantation 1993; 55(3): 542-546.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/00007890-199303000-00016

PMID

8456475

Abstract

Study of all Vermont and urban Rhode Island trauma fatalities for 1987, and all fatalities in these states from nontraumatic intracranial hemorrhage for 1986 and 1987, identified few potential donors for asystole-sensitive organs, such as heart, lungs, liver, pancreas, and kidneys. It is estimated that nationally there is a maximum potential of about 5000 cadavers per year from these two sources that meet screening criteria for age, duration of survival after event, brain death, and absence of organ damage or important disease. This would yield up to 5000 hearts, livers, and pancreases, perhaps 5-6000 lungs, and up to 10,000 kidneys. However, for tissues that have longer postdeath viability it is estimated that annually at least 60,000 eyes, 22,000 heart valve sets, 29,000 donations of 2 or more long bones per cadaver, and 36,000 skin donations are potentially available from these sources.


Language: en

Keywords

Accidents, Traffic; Algorithms; Cerebral Hemorrhage; Homicide; Humans; Organ Transplantation; Rhode Island; Suicide; Time Factors; Tissue Donors; Tissue Transplantation; Vermont; Wounds and Injuries

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