Clinics in chest medicine
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Clinics in chest medicine · Jun 2011
ReviewNovel approaches to expanding the lung donor pool: donation after cardiac death and ex vivo conditioning.
Two novel approaches have been developed to potentially increase the availability of donor lungs for lung transplantation. In the first approach, lungs from donation after cardiac death (DCD) donors are used to increase the quantity of organ donors. In the second approach, a newly developed normothermic ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) technique is used as a means of reassessing the adequacy of lung function from DCD and from high-risk brain death donors prior to transplantation. This EVLP technique can also act as a platform for the delivery of novel therapies to repair injured organs ex vivo.
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Clinics in chest medicine · Jun 2011
Review Historical ArticleExtracorporeal life support as a bridge to lung transplantation.
Patients who are excellent candidates for lung transplantation often die on the waiting list because they are too sick to survive until an organ becomes available. Improvements in lung transplant outcomes, patient selection, and artificial lung device technologies have made it possible to bridge these patients to successful life-saving transplantation. Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) should be tailored to minimize morbidity and provide the appropriate mode and level of cardiopulmonary support for each patient's physiologic requirements. Novel device refinements and further development of ECLS in an ambulatory and simplified manner will help maintain these patients in better condition until transplantation.
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Clinics in chest medicine · Jun 2011
ReviewAlternatives to lung transplantation: lung volume reduction for COPD.
Emphysema is disabling and progressive and hallmarked by decreased exercise tolerance and impaired quality of life. Surgical interventions that reduce lung volume have been the focus of multiple interventions for decades; however, until recently, limited evidence has documented their effectiveness. Lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) underwent rigorous study in the National Emphysema Treatment Trial (NETT), which demonstrated its short-term and long-term effectiveness, associated morbidity and mortality, and the essential factors that predict LVRS success or failure. This article summarizes the major results of the NETT and briefly reviews newer bronchoscopic lung volume reduction techniques that show promise as alternative treatments for select patients with COPD undergoing consideration for lung transplantation.
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Primary graft dysfunction (PGD) is the most important cause of early morbidity and mortality following lung transplantation. PGD affects up to 25% of all lung transplant procedures and currently has no proven preventive therapy. Lung transplant recipients who recover from PGD may have impaired long-term function and an increased risk of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome. This article aims to provide a state-of-the-art review of PGD epidemiology, outcomes, and risk factors, and to summarize current efforts at biomarker development and novel strategies for prevention and treatment.