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Use of endovasclar hypothermia in organ and/or tissue transplantations

a technology of endovasclar and organs, applied in the field of human or veterinary medical treatment, can solve the problems of reducing the number of important transplantable organs (e.g., hearts), and reducing the potential for hypoxic damag

Active Publication Date: 2019-04-02
ZOLL CIRCULATION
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

The present invention provides methods for reducing the chance of damage to transplantable organs in brain-dead organ donors and for preventing or treating acute transplant rejection in patients who have received organs or tissues transplants. The invention includes the use of a heat exchange apparatus that cools the blood flowing through the potential donor's vasculature to prevent hypoxic damage to the transplantable organs. This method may be used in cases where the donor has not yet been brain-dead or the organs have not been harvested.

Problems solved by technology

Every day, approximately ten people die in the United States while awaiting an organ transplant, simply because suitable donor organs are not available for them in time.
However, it remains uncertain as to whether xenotransplantation research will ultimately give rise to universally useable organs of all needed types and even if the current research is successful, the potential clinical implementation of xenotransplantation techniques remains many years away.
However, a number of important transplantable organs (e.g., hearts) can not typically be harvested from cadaveric donors more than just a few minutes after the cardiac death has occurred because the viability of the organ is lost.
However, because of the shortage of suitable donor organs, the number of organ transplants that will actually be performed during the year 2001 is likely to be substantially lower than the number of patients on the waiting list.
Apart from the fact that the pool of potential organ donors is relatively small compared to the demand for transplantable organs, the shortage of organs is further exacerbated by the fact that sometimes, even after a potential donors family has agreed to organ donation, that donor's organs are lost because the donors cardiac activity can not be maintained for sufficient time to allow the necessary testing to establish and certify brain-death and to arrange for the arrival of the team of surgeons who are trained to remove the desired organ(s) from the donor's body.

Method used

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  • Use of endovasclar hypothermia in organ and/or tissue transplantations
  • Use of endovasclar hypothermia in organ and/or tissue transplantations
  • Use of endovasclar hypothermia in organ and/or tissue transplantations

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Embodiment Construction

[0039]The following detailed description is provided for the purpose of describing only certain embodiments or examples of the invention and is not intended to describe all possible embodiments and examples of the invention.

A. A Preferred Intravascular Heat Exchange Catheter System Useable To Perform the Methods of This Invention

[0040]Referring to FIGS. 1 through 10A, in one embodiment, the catheter is comprised of a shaft 50 with a heat exchange region 100 thereon. The shaft has two roughly parallel lumens running through the proximal shaft, an inflow lumen 52 and an outflow lumen 54. The shaft generally also comprises a working lumen 56 running therethrough for the insertion of a guide wire, or the application of drugs, radiographic dye, or the like to the distal end of the catheter. The heat exchange region comprises a four-lumen balloon, with three outer lumens 58, 60, 62 disposed around an inner lumen 64 in a helical pattern. In the particular embodiment shown, the balloon pref...

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Abstract

Methods for (a) preventing hypoxic damage to a potentially transplantable organ or tissue prior to explanation of that organ or tissue from the body of a mammalian transplant donor and (b) preventing rejection of a transplanted organ or tissue in a human or veterinary transplant recipient. The methods comprise placing a heat exchange apparatus in the vasculature of the donor or recipient and using that heat exchange apparatus to cool at least a portion of the body of the donor or recipient to a temperature below normothermia (e.g. below normothermia and sometimes between about 30° C. and about 36° C.).

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION[0001]This invention relates generally to methods for human or veterinary medical treatment and more particularly to a) the endovascular application of hypothermia to beating heart donors prior to harvesting of organ(s) and / or tissue(s) for transplantation to avoid hypoxic damage to the organ(s) and / or tissue(s) and b) the endovascular (e.g., intravascular) application of hypothermia to transplant recipients during and / or after transplantation of organ(s) and / or tissue(s) to reduce acute inflammatory response and help avoid acute transplant rejection and / or other complications.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0002]In the early days of organ transplantation, all cadaveric (non-living) organ donors were pronounced dead by loss of heart function or “cardiac death” criteria. However, in the late 1960's and early 1970's “brain death” criteria were developed that allowed organs to be harvested from donors who's hearts were still beating but who had been pronounced dead ba...

Claims

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Application Information

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IPC IPC(8): A61F7/12
CPCA61F7/12A61F2007/126
Inventor KENNETH, JR., HAYES
Owner ZOLL CIRCULATION