Transplant Donors Fulton NY

Giving the neurotransmitter dopamine to brain-dead organ donors may help preserve the quality of their kidneys for more successful transplantation, new research suggests. Most transplanted kidneys come from donors whose hearts are beating but who have suffered brain death, a traumatic chain of events that can damage organs and increase the likelihood of the recipient needing dialysis after surgery.

George Dermesropian
(315) 598-3585
455 South Fourth Street
Fulton, NY
George Der Mesropian, MD
455 S 4th St
Fulton, NY
Ravi Seth, MD
315-343-2151
3312 Oak Brook Rd
Baldwinsville, NY
James Irwin Boles, MD
315-342-5488
154 W 7th St
Oswego, NY
Allison A Duggan, MD
110A W Utica St
Oswego, NY
Leonard Angelo Metildi, MD
315-593-2569
610 E Broadway
Fulton, NY
Mohamed Mudathir Abdulhamid, MD
3701 Whispering Woods Ln
Baldwinsville, NY
Allison Althea Nicole Duggan, MD FACS
315-342-6771
110A W Utica St
Oswego, NY
Alfred Augustine Santos, MD
520-452-0144
12 Margaret St
Oswego, NY
Alan J Davies, MD FACS
315-342-5208
135 W Cayuga St
Oswego, NY
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Transplant Donors

TUESDAY, Sept. 8 (HealthDay News) -- Giving the neurotransmitter dopamine to brain-dead organ donors may help preserve the quality of their kidneys for more successful transplantation, new research suggests.

Most transplanted kidneys come from donors whose hearts are beating but who have suffered brain death, a traumatic chain of events that can damage organs and increase the likelihood of the recipient needing dialysis after surgery.

According to the study by researchers from the University Medical Centre in Mannheim, Germany, treating brain-dead organ donors with dopamine reduced the likelihood the kidney recipient would need dialysis in the first week after the transplantation.

The study is published in the Sept. 9 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

In a trial that involved 264 deceased heart-beating donors, low-dose infusions of dopamine were given to the donors for an average of nearly six hours.

After surgery, about 35.4 percent of kidney recipients whose donors did not receive dopamine required multiple dialyses before their renal function recovered, compared to 24.7 percent in the dopamine group.

The study also found that needing multiple dialyses increased the chances of transplantation failure in the long-term; a single, post-transplant dialysis did not.

"This study shows that pretreatment of the deceased heart-beating donor with low-dose dopamine reduces the need for dialysis in the recipient after kidney transplantation," researchers wrote.

The organ donations resulted in 487 kidney transplants at 60 hospitals in Europe between March 2004 and August 2007.

More information

For more on organ donation, see OrganDonor.gov.

SOURCE: JAMA, new release, Sept. 8. 2009

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