counter customizable free hit
New Tool may help improve Organ Donation Rates

 

 

 

 

 

 
 


Home
Up
Administration Flip-Flop
Advance Directives Guidelines
Assisted Suicide Debate
Biological Clock Influence
Behavior, Death Risk
Bereavement Perceptions
Blacks, End-of-Life Care
Boomers' Proxy
Cancer Patients End-of-Life
Cancer Death at Home
Cancer Survivor Mortality
Caregiver Grief
Chemo Guidelines
Children at Services
Comatose Nerve Tests
Comfort before Death
Computer Precitions
Counseling, Coping
Cremation Tips
Cutting Infections Cuts Deaths
Dealing with Loss
Death and Dying
Death, Dying Exposure
Death Incidences Cut
Death with Dignity
Dementia Death at Home
Dementia, Palliative Care
Determining Brain Death
Diabetes Manaagement
Discussion Gives Heart
Docs' Religious Views
Do Not Resuscitate Rights
Dying Prostate Patients
Ease End-of-Life Distress
End of Life Assistance
End-of-Life Decisions
End-of-Life Tips
End-Stage Dementia Treatment
Ethics, End-of-Life Care
Fear of Dying
Final Days in Hospital
Grief at Holidays
Heart Patient Care
Holiday Grieving
Home Palliative Sedation
Hospice Information
Hospital Deaths
Hospice Fraud Suit
Improve Care for Dying
Improved Care Needed
Improvements Fall Short
Increased Organ Donations
Influence of Death Awareness
Keep Fit for Health
Lack of Pre-Planning
Leave Written Legacy
Living Longer Odds Down
Lonliness Death Link
Music Aids Departure
New Docs, Death Spike
Nurses' Schedule, Mortality
Nursing Care at Death
Obituary Photo Age Bias
Oregon Death with Dignity
Oregon Emphasizes Choices
Organ Donations Drop
Organ Transplant Float
Oxygen Use Questioned
Palliative Care Grant
Palliative Care, Dementia
Palliative Care Interest
Palliative Care Mlonth
Palliative Care Training
Patient's Wishes Paramount
Pathfinder Palliative Care
Physicians, Bereaving Families
Preparing for Death
Presidents Live Longer
Racial Outcomes Differ
Spiritual Counseling
Spiritual Relationship
Stem Cells Deter Aging
Suffocation, Hanging Suicides
Surviving Silent Killer
Terminal Cancer Patients
Terminal Dementia Patients
Who Decides Life Death?
Widower Fathers Outreach
2004  Death Statistics
2020 NCOA Goals
2012 Successful Aging

Home
Aging and Arthritis
Aging and Cancer
Aging Avoid Entrepreneurship
Aging, Cancer Deterrent
Aging Causes Diseases
Aging Consumer Launches
Aging, Depression
Boomers' News
Confronting Mental Decline
Elderly Driving Stories
End of Life
Seniors' Concerns
Part D Confusion
Health Care Concerns
Environments for Aging
Extra Day Personal Care
Texas Takes Aging Lead
Kohl Heads  Committee
Senior Dogs Deserve Care
What Concerns Seniors
2009 Aging in America Facts

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left
 

New Tool may help improve Organ Donation Rates

 

Newswise — A new tool may help neurologists predict which coma patients may be candidates for organ donation, according to a study published in the April 27, 2010, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

Organ donations must take place within 60 minutes of when the heart stops beating. Coma patients and other people with irreversible brain injuries are often potential organ donors because their other organs are usually healthy.

 

“Neurologists must often predict whether the patient will be a candidate for organ donation, but the existing tools are not designed for people with critical brain disease or they require the patient to be taken temporarily off ventilator support to conduct the test,” said study author Alan Yee, DO, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

 

“This new test is a significant improvement because it can be conducted before the patient is taken off breathing support and is designed for people with critical brain disease.”

 

For the study, Yee and his colleagues analyzed the information from all patients during a seven-year period from the neurologic intensive care unit at the Mayo Clinic whose life support was withdrawn.

 

Those who were brain dead or who did not have support for breathing were not included in the study.

 

A total of 149 comatose people were included in the study. After the withdrawal of life support, the heart stopped beating within 60 minutes for 75 people.

 

The study identified four factors that make it more likely that a person with irreversible brain damage will be a candidate for organ donation.

 

The four factors are: no corneal reflex, no cough reflex, no motor response or extensor motor response, and high scores on the oxygenation index.

 

For the corneal reflex, people blink when the cornea is touched with a small piece of cotton or dripping water solution. People who do not have a corneal reflex are more likely to be candidates.

 

People who do not have a cough reflex also are more likely to be candidates. For the cough reflex test, a chemical irritant is placed near the patient to see if the cough reflex will expel the irritant.

 

Responses to painful stimulation can also be tested. People who have no motor movements in response to pain and people who have extensor movements on their own or in response to pain are also more likely to be candidates for organ donation. Extensor motor response is a reflex movement of straightening the arms and legs.

 

People who have a score of greater than 4.2 on the oxygenation index, which is a test of how well the lungs are functioning, are also more likely to be good candidates for organ donation.

 

The study found that people with all four factors were 93 percent more likely to die within 60 minutes of withdrawal of life support than people with none of the factors. People with one of the four factors were 65 percent to 76 percent more likely to die within 60 minutes.

 

 “This research will need to be validated with further studies, but it would be a valuable tool that could help improve organ donation rates after cardiac death and also help optimize the allocation of medical resources,” said Yee.

 

Study co-author Eelco Wijdicks, MD, also with the Mayo Clinic, is an author of a guideline on brain death that will be issued by the American Academy of Neurology in June.
 

The American Academy of Neurology, an association of more than 22,000 neurologists and neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to promoting the highest quality patient-centered neurologic care.

 

A neurologist is a doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system such as multiple sclerosis, restless legs syndrome, Alzheimer’s disease, narcolepsy and stroke.
 

For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit http://www.aan.com.

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
Aging News
Seniors Commentary
California Report
Caregiving_News.htm
Community/Workplace
Election 2012
'Smart Bombing' Diseases
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
HealthCare Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Prescription Drug News
Resources, Links
Rural Seniors
Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups
Safety & Security
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors' Finances
Seniors Relationships
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
Veterans Tribute
Privacy Statement
Join Our Mailing List
Aging Resources Store
TSN Video News
Rx for American Health
New Page 12

 

 

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us