New Tool may help improve Organ Donation
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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Clinic whose life support was withdrawn.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.
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