Overcoming the Boundaries of Heart Warm Ischemia in Donation after Circulatory Death: The Padua Case

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Abstract

A 45 year old male obese patient with a previous history of repaired congenital heart disease developed worsening heart failure making heart transplantation listing mandatory. Unfortunately, due to his anthropometric measures, the search for a suitable brain-dead donor was unsuccessful. For this reason, he accepted to be enrolled in the controlled donation after circulatory death (cDCD) program. According to the Italian Law regulating death declaration after cardiac arrest (no-touch period of 20 minutes - one of the longest in the world), we faced a 34 minute cardiac asystole, after which the heart was recovered through a thoraco-abdominal normothermic regional perfusion excluding the epiaortic vessels. The heart was then preserved by means of cold static storage. Heart transplantation was performed successfully without any signs of primary graft failure. Postoperative endomyocardial biopsies were negative for acute cellular and antibody-mediated rejection. Furthermore, echocardiographic and cardiac magnetic resonance evaluation of the heart did not show any functional abnormalities. The patient was discharged on post-operative day (POD) #39 in good clinical conditions.

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Gerosa, G., Zanatta, P., Angelini, A., Fedrigo, M., Bianco, R., Pittarello, D., … Tarzia, V. (2024). Overcoming the Boundaries of Heart Warm Ischemia in Donation after Circulatory Death: The Padua Case. ASAIO Journal, 70(8), e113–e117. https://doi.org/10.1097/MAT.0000000000002141

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