(Press-News.org) There is "significant" potential for organ donation to be made from among UK newborns, reveals research published online in the Fetal & Neonatal Edition of the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
But it is going untapped because of current guidelines on the definition of brainstem death, which run counter to those used by many other developed countries, say the authors.
There are fewer children than adults on the waiting list for donated organs, but there are also far fewer potential donors for any child, particularly those of a younger age for whom only small sized organs can be used, the authors point out.
But size is not the only limiting factor in the UK, because current death verification and certification national standards effectively prohibit the use of brainstem death (DNDD) as a valid definition in infants aged between 37 weeks and two months.
This is because national guidelines from the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges suggest that it is 'rarely possible to confirm death using neurological criteria in infants under two months of age,' although this is done in many other European countries, Australasia, and the USA.
Newborn organ donation is possible after a definition of circulatory death (DCDD), but in practice does not happen for this age group, say the authors.
The authors looked at all the infants who died in neonatal or paediatric intensive care at one large specialist tertiary children's hospital between 2006 and 2012.
They reviewed all the documentation for each case to see whether the child might have been a potential DCDD organ donor or whether they fulfilled the criteria for brainstem death and so might have been a potential DNDD donor.
During the study period, 84 infants aged between 37 weeks and two months died in intensive care at the hospital, over half of whom (54%) could have been potential organ donors.
Thirty four (40%) were potential DCDD donors; 11 were potential DNDD donors.
The potential DNDD donors all had extensive brain damage, had been in a coma, were not breathing on their own, and had evidence of brainstem impairment. All of them died within minutes of their life support being withdrawn, and would theoretically have fulfilled the criteria for brainstem death, calling into question the validity of the current guidelines, say the authors.
Of the rest, a further 10 infants were possible but unlikely donors, and 29 were not suitable donors because they had had cancer or metabolic disease, or had not had life support withdrawn.
"These results suggest a significant proportion of neonates who died in one children's hospital were potential organ donors," write the authors. "..Even with a conservative conversion rate of 50%, these organs would significantly increase the overall total of small sized organs donated in the UK," they say.
"This is especially important as for many potential recipients there are so few organs of this size being donated that they are not currently being listed for transplantation," they add.
The authors point out that there must be unrealised potential in other centres across the UK, and if the guidelines were revised and training in organ donation given to neonatal teams, the numbers of both DNDD and DCDD organ donations would increase.
INFORMATION:
[The potential for neonatal organ donation in a children's hospital Online First doi 10.1136/archdischild-2013-304803]
'Significant' untapped potential for newborn organ donation in UK
Guidelines on death certification should be reviewed to bring UK in line with other countries
2014-03-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Young women most at risk least likely to be offered HPV jab
2014-03-18
Young women who are most at risk of developing cervical cancer are the least likely to be offered the protective HPV jab and to complete the full course when they are, reveals research published online in the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections.
These women need to be better targeted to boost the overall uptake of the vaccination programme, which was well below the 80% required to make a significant difference to cervical cancer rates during its first three years of operation, say the authors.
They base their findings on responses to anonymous questionnaires completed ...
CF Foundation and CF care expert partnership yields striking progress for people with cystic fibrosi
2014-03-18
A decade of strategic efforts to improve care has had a key role in improving quality of life and added years to predicted survival for people with cystic fibrosis (CF) in the United States, according to the editors of a BMJ Quality & Safety supplement dedicated to the disease.
Health outcomes for CF have improved dramatically following implementation of an innovative and aggressive plan to promote quality improvement at CF care centres.
This includes benchmarking comparisons of current care with best practice; use of a patient registry to track outcomes; patient ...
The Lancet: China halves tuberculosis prevalence in just 20 years
2014-03-18
Over the last 20 years, China has more than halved its tuberculosis (TB) prevalence, with rates falling from 170 to 59 per 100 000 population. This unrivalled success has been driven by a massive scale-up of the directly observed, short-course (DOTS) strategy, from half the population in the 1990s to the entire country after 2000, according to findings from a 20-year-long analysis of national survey data, published in The Lancet.
"One of the key global TB targets set by the Stop TB Partnership aims to reduce tuberculosis prevalence by 50% between 1990 and 2015. This study ...
Toward 'vanishing' electronics and unlocking nanomaterials' power potential
2014-03-17
DALLAS, March 17, 2014 — Brain sensors and electronic tags that dissolve. Boosting the potential of renewable energy sources. These are examples of the latest research from two pioneering scientists selected as this year's Kavli lecturers at the 247th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society.
The meeting features more than 10,000 presentations from the frontiers of chemical research, and is being held here through Thursday. Two of these talks are supported by The Kavli Foundation, a philanthropic organization ...
Annals of Internal Medicine tip sheet for March 18, 2014
2014-03-17
1. Evidence does not support guidelines on fatty acid consumption to reduce coronary risk
Current evidence does not support nutritional guidelines that advocate high consumption of polyunsaturated fatty acids and low consumption of total saturated fats, according to an article being published in Annals of Internal Medicine. For cardiovascular health, nutritional guidelines generally encourage low consumption of saturated fats, high consumption of w-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, and avoidance of trans fats. However, uncertainties in available evidence have contributed ...
Children's preferences for sweeter and saltier tastes are linked to each other
2014-03-17
Philadelphia (March 17, 2014) – Scientists from the Monell Chemical Senses Center have found that children who most prefer high levels of sweet tastes also most prefer high levels of salt taste and that, in general, children prefer sweeter and saltier tastes than do adults. These preferences relate not only to food intake but also to measures of growth and can have important implications for efforts to change children's diets.
Many illnesses of modern society are related to poor food choices. Because children consume far more sugar and salt than recommended, which contributes ...
Hepatitis C remains major problem for HIV patients despite antiretroviral therapy
2014-03-17
PHILADELPHIA—A new study led by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania has found that the risk of hepatitis C-associated serious liver disease persists in HIV patients otherwise benefitting from antiretroviral therapy (ART) to treat HIV.
It has been suggested that ART slows hepatitis C-associated liver fibrosis; however, whether rates of severe liver complications in patients co-infected with HIV and hepatitis C receiving ART were similar to those with just hepatitis C remained unclear.
The study, published in the March 18 ...
Closer to detecting preeclampsia
2014-03-17
Identifying biomarkers could lead to earlier detection of preeclampsia, which in turn can lead to healthier mothers and children, according to a collaborative study from the Centre of Molecular Inflammation Research (CEMIR) and the MR Cancer Group at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). Their findings, "Metabolomic Biomarkers in Serum and Urine in Women with Preeclampsia," will be published in PLOS ONE on 17 March.
"We have found that the metabolism in women who experience preeclampsia is clearly different from women with normal pregnancies. The ...
New evidence raises questions about the link between fatty acids and heart disease
2014-03-17
A new study raises questions about current guidelines which generally restrict the consumption of saturated fats and encourage consumption of polyunsaturated fats to prevent heart disease. The research was published today, 18 March, in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.
An international research collaboration led by the University of Cambridge analysed existing cohort studies and randomised trials on coronary risk and fatty acid intake. They showed that current evidence does not support guidelines which restrict the consumption of saturated fats in order to prevent ...
Knowing whether food has spoiled without even opening the container (video)
2014-03-17
DALLAS, March 17, 2014 — A color-coded smart tag could tell consumers whether a carton of milk has turned sour or a can of green beans has spoiled without opening the containers, according to researchers. The tag, which would appear on the packaging, also could be used to determine if medications and other perishable products were still active or fresh, they said.
This report on the color-changing food deterioration tags was presented today as part of the 247th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific society. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Novel photochromic glass can store rewritable 3D patterns
Sea sponge inspires super strong compressible material
AI generates playful, human-like games
Bacteria ‘leaking across stomach lining’ could indicate risk of gastric cancer, new study has found
Feeding anemone: Symbiote fish actively feed hosts in wild
New AI-powered tool could enhance traumatic brain injury investigations in forensics and law enforcement
A protein from tiny tardigrades may help cancer patients tolerate radiation therapy
Double network hydrogel polymers with rapid self-strengthening abilities
Schizophrenia is reflected in the brain structure
Researchers warn continuous glucose monitors can overestimate blood sugar levels
Colorectal cancer: Lipids can predict treatment efficacy
Physical activity boosts mental health in women with chronic pelvic pain disorders
New method searches through 10 sextillion drug molecules
Breakthrough in the development of a new low-cost computer
New computer model can predict the length of a household's displacement in any U.S. community after a disaster
At your service: How older adults embrace demand-responsive transportation
Enhancing lithium-ion battery performance with roll-to-roll compatible flash process technology
Simulating scientists: New tool for AI-powered scientific discovery
Helium in the Earth's core
Study: First female runner could soon break the 4-minute-mile barrier
High dietary fish intake may slow disability progression in MS
UK Armed Forces servicewomen face unique set of hurdles for abortion access/care
Use of strong synthetic opioids during surgery linked to poor composite experience of pain
UK innovation to transform treatment for people with type 2 diabetes worldwide
AI model can read ECGs to identify female patients at higher risk of heart disease
Biological organ ages predict disease risk decades in advance
New manzanita species discovered, already at risk
Giant ice bulldozers: How ancient glaciers helped life evolve
Toward high electro-optic performance in III-V semiconductors
In mouse embryos, sister cells commit suicide in unison
[Press-News.org] 'Significant' untapped potential for newborn organ donation in UKGuidelines on death certification should be reviewed to bring UK in line with other countries