Utilization of trauma-related deaths for organ and tissue harvesting.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-1992
Abstract
A randomized retrospective analysis of patients who suffered trauma-related deaths over 36 months (May 1987-April 1990) was performed to study their utilization as candidates for organ and tissue harvesting. There were a total of 108 patients: 79 males, 29 females. The average age was 46.2 years; 38 (36%) of these patients were 65 years of age or older. Over 50% of fatalities were the result of motor vehicle crashes. There were 61 potential tissue donors. Forty-three were lost without documentation of a request for organ procurement. There were 23 patients with potentially salvageable organs: one candidate was lost without documentation of a request for organ procurement. Twenty-eight (26%) of the patients had support withdrawn; 16 were 65 years old or older. Brain death protocol was instituted in 17 (20%); organs were obtained from 70% of these patients. Reasons for failure of procurement after request by a physician included family refusal in seven cases, cardiopulmonary arrest during brain death protocol in two cases, and religious bias in one candidate. Twelve patients were organ donors: 10 patients were tissue donors. We conclude that the greatest source of underutilization lies in the failure to request tissue for harvesting, since there were no isolated tissue donors. Pertinent information should be more widely distributed to physicians regarding candidacy for tissue donation. Further consideration of the adequacy of organs or tissue in relation to the candidates' age should be given, since patients aged 65 years and older can be a significant source of potential donor candidates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Volume
33
Issue
4
First Page
516
Last Page
519
ISSN
0022-5282
Published In/Presented At
Kennedy, A. P., Jr, West, J. C., Kelley, S. E., & Brotman, S. (1992). Utilization of trauma-related deaths for organ and tissue harvesting. The Journal of trauma, 33(4), 516–520. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005373-199210000-00005
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
1433396
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article