Abstract

We investigated clinical characteristics and demographics of brain death in patients from a single center in Korea to identify possible changes in organ procurement by comparing early and late periods. Potential donors diagnosed as brain dead and who had provided organ donation consent from May 2000 to May 2020 were considered. Donors were divided into 2 categories: early period (2000-2010) and late period (2011-2020).Demographic data, clinicalrisk factors, cause of death, use ofinotropic and vasoconstrictor agents, laboratory findings, intensive care unit stay data, loss of donors, and number of donated organs were analyzed. Mean age of donors significantly increased in the late period (36.0 ± 12.0 vs 46.0 ± 15.1 years), but there were no significant differences in the proportion of females and the number of pediatric donors (<18 years). The number of donors who smoked decreased (61% vs 41%), but hypertension rate increased significantly in the late period (17.4% vs 31.0%). In the late period, fewer brain dead donors were lost (19.0% vs 7.59%) and use of vasoconstrictor agents was more frequent (25.3% vs 64.5%) than use of inotropic agents (73.1% vs 49.3%). In the late period, heart(19.0% vs 37.3%) and lung (0% vs 18.3%) procurement rates increased and the number of transplanted organs per donorincreased (2.58 ± 1.6 vs 3.14 ± 1.50; P = .016). Causes of death were primarily from head traumas (34.4%), cerebral aneurysms (21.7%), spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage (21.3%), and asphyxia/hanging (16.3%). Head trauma decreased in the late period (46% vs 29.7%; P = .021) but still constituted the most common cause of death. We found no definite demographic changes in brain dead donors. Donors with cerebrovascular disease increased annually, but trauma was still the most common cause of brain death, with suicides being highly frequent.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call