Abstract
The increasing donor organ shortage requires the consideration of any possible organ donor in order to meet the current demand. However, the growing number of long-term survivors of liver transplantation may create a situation in which former organ recipients may experience brain death with a functioning graft and therefore become organ donors themselves. Previous reports concerning this rare situation predominantly refer to the reuse of donor organs within the first 8 days after primary liver transplantation. So far, only a single case of late reuse of a donor liver has been published, with 2 additional cases mentioned in a summary of the United Network for Organ Sharing database. Here we report the case of a 43-yearold female donor who had received a liver graft for complications of Budd-Chiari syndrome 5 years before becoming an organ donor herself after cerebral infarction with consecutive brain death. © 2010 AASLD.
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CITATION STYLE
Rentsch, M., Meyer, J., Andrassy, J., Fischer-Fröhlich, C. L., Rust, C., Mueller, S., … Graeb, C. (2010). Late Reuse of liver allografts from brain-dead graft recipients: The Munich experience and a review of the literature. Liver Transplantation, 16(6), 701–704. https://doi.org/10.1002/lt.22053
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