Carcass wrote:
Although multi-organ transplants have become more common, scientists and surgeons continue to face the ineluctable obstacle of time.
We still have the key problem organ-related: the time we have to implant them into someone's body
Current donor organ preservation times hover around five to six hours. Because of the complicated tissue-matching process, oftentimes organs are unable to reach their beneficiaries, wasting valuable, viable organs.
We have from four to five hours to use the organs. actually this is the time the organs must reach the receiver and be implanted
However, scientists are hopeful that a certain substance, called the Hibernation Induction Trigger (HIT), will extend the life of a potential transplant organ.
HIT could do the trick to prolong to some extent the time we can still use the organs
HIT is an opiate-like substance found in the blood of hibernating animals.
We find it in animals that go sleep for the entire fall/winter season until the spring season, such as bears
Previous experiments have shown that opioids act as an autoperfusion block, preventing blood from flowing through the lymphatic system to organs, a phenomenon known as ischemia.
HIT blocks the process called ischemia: the flowing of the blood through the organs. Actually the organs are like freezing
In a preliminary experiment, an infusion of plasma with the Delta opioid delayed hemorrhaging in certain laboratory animals.
an experiment, maybe with another substance similar to HIT, called delta, delivered certain results in CERTAIN animals NOT all we have tested into the lab
When this arresting of activity was applied to the transplantation of organs, physicians reported preservation times up to 15 hours, a more than two-fold increase over standard conservation.
From five hours we went to 15 hours the organs were useful.
Scientists have extrapolated from these findings, further identifying the opioid DADLE as integral to triggering the hibernation process.
We found another substance called DANDLE to integrate the process to onset the freezing process similar to that the animals have
Infusing HIT-molecule-containing plasma from hibernating woodchucks into canine lungs increased preservation times more than three-fold from previous findings.
Another experiment
This experiment suggests that, should a potential donor organ be infused with these trigger molecules before the organ is harvested, the organ would remain transplantable for up to 45 hours, greatly increasing the chance for doctors to find a suitable recipient.
HIT + the two triggers we have up to 45 hours usefulness
Though these results are exciting, they do nothing to increase survival rates from an organ transplant operation, which currently hover at 60 percent over four years, because patients are still susceptible to infection and rejection.
All the above is useful to maintain the organs on the way from the donor to the receiver but until now we have a high case mortality of the receivers: 6 out of ten of them will die once transplanted within 4 years
Scientists are a long way from declaring HIT-molecules a safe and consistent method of organ preservation.
We nned further investigation on HIT
Still, other areas of science have taken an interest in this research. NASA, for example, is considering the implications of human hibernation for deep space travel.
Another field of application of the HIT could be in the space missions
“Previous experiments have shown that opioids act as an autoperfusion block, preventing blood from flowing through the lymphatic system to organs, a phenomenon known as ischemia.
HIT blocks the process called ischemia: the flowing of the blood through the organs. Actually the organs are like freezing”
That part of the passage states opioids but no reference is actually made to HIT.
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