• Indian heart journal · Dec 2018

    Review

    Heart transplantation after the circulatory death; The ethical dilemma.

    • Shayan Marsia, Ariba Khan, Maryam Khan, Saba Ahmed, Javeria Hayat, Abdul Mannan Khan Minhas, Samir Mirza, Nisar Asmi, and Jonathon Constantin.
    • Dow Medical College, Dow University of Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan. Electronic address: shayan.shoaib420@gmail.com.
    • Indian Heart J. 2018 Dec 1; 70 Suppl 3: S442-S445.

    AbstractDonors after brain death (DBD) have been the major source of organ donation due to good perfusion of the organs. However, owing to the mismatch in demand and supply of the organ donors and recipients, donors after circulatory death (DCDDs) has increased recently all over the world. Kidneys, liver, and lungs are being used for transplantation from DCDDs. Recently, heart transplantation from DCDDs has been started, which is under the firestorm of scrutiny by the ethicists. The ethical dilemma revolves around the question whether the donors are actually dead when they are declared dead by cardiocirculatory death criteria for organ procurement. The subsequent literature review addresses all the perspectives by differentiating between the donation methods known as DBDs and DCDDs, explaining the implications of the dead-donor rule on the organ donation pool, and categorizing the determinants of death leading to separation of the arguments under the two methods of donations.Copyright © 2018 Cardiological Society of India. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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